Monthly Archives: September 2009

Ohio Supreme Court finds that Cincinnati Public Schools standardized exams protected by trade secret

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Filed under Trade Secret

State ex rel. Perrea v. Cincinnati Pub. Schools, 2009 WL 2973196 (Ohio 2009)

Federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction over “patent, plant variety protection and copyright cases.” 28 U.S.C. § 1338. I’m always surprised, nonetheless, at how common it is for state courts to end up deciding copyright issues. Such was the case last Thursday in the Supreme Court of Ohio.

The Cincinnati Public Schools adopted a strategic initiative under which they administered a test every semester to ninth, tenth, and eleventh graders. A teacher in one of the high schools in the district was concerned about the fairness and accuracy of the exams and made repeated requests to access the tests. The teacher specified that he would only use the copies for “criticism, research, comment, and/or education.”  The school district denied the request and the teacher filed a writ mandamus to compel the public school district to provide copies of semester examinations pursuant to Ohio’s Public Records Act, R.C. § 149.43. Under R.C.149.34(A)(1)(v), however, a record is not a public record if its release is “prohibited” by federal or state law.

The Cincinnati Public Schools argued that the exams did not need to be disclosed because they were protected by trade secret and because the release of the tests was prohibited by federal copyright law.

Trade secret

The Ohio Supreme Court cited to State ex rel. The Plain Dealer v. Ohio Dept. of Ins. 687 N.E.2d 661, 687 N.E.2d 661 (Ohio 1997) and State ex rel. Besser v. Ohio State Univ., 732 N.E.2d 373 (Ohio 2000) for the test to determine whether material is a trade secret:

“(1) The extent to which the information is known outside the business; (2) the extent to which it is known inside the business, i.e., by the employees; (3) the precautions taken by the holder of the trade secret to guard the secrecy of the information; (4) the savings effected and the value to the holder in having the information as against competitors; (5) the amount of effort or money  , expended in obtaining and developing the information; and (6) the amount of time and expense it would take for others to acquire and duplicate the information.”

The majority of the Court found that the tests were entitled to protection as trade secrets and were therefore not public documents that needed to be disclosed.

Copyright

Justice O’Connor, joined by Justice Moyer, dissented in part, finding that portions of the exams were not entitled to protection as trade secrets. Justice O’Connor then moved on to the issue of whether the disclosure of the exams would require the school district to violate the Copyright Act. Although Justice O’Connor didn’t address the issue of ownership, she proceeded as if the company that formulated the tests was the owner of the the copyright in the tests. Justice O’Connor conducted a fair use evaluation finding that proposed use of the tests was fair use and did not violate federal law because they proposed use was noncommercial.

[The teacher] has no intention of copying the requested ninth-grade semester exams for commercial purposes. He intends to use the copies for criticism, research, comment, and/or education. Nor is there any evidence of the effect of [teacher]‘s proposed use of the exams on the potential market for the exams’ copyrighted portions. Therefore, I would hold that CPS did not establish that the requested semester exams are excepted from disclosure as copyrighted materials.

China IP Law Search website launched

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Filed under News

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce, the Delegation of the European Commission to China and academics from Peking University have launched a new website that provides English language translations of the regulations, procedure and substantive law that govern intellectual property in China.  The site describes itself thus:

China IP Law Search intends to provide users with access all laws relevant for IP protection in China. It aims to be a valuable source of information for companies, professionals and students working, studying or simply interested in the Chinese legal IP environment. Use this tool to search the China IP Law database based on bibliographic infromation or perform a full text search of all published texts.

E.D.N.Y. rejects awarding statutory damages independently under the Copyright Act, Lanham Act and DMCA

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Filed under Damages

Tu v. TAD System Technology Inc., 2009 WL 2905780 (E.D.N.Y. 2009)

The Plaintiff produced software for bars and restaurants. The Plaintiff alleged that the Defendant distributed copies of the software that infringed its trademarks and copyrights, and that the Defendant had violated the DMCA. The Defendant failed to answer the complaint and the court entered default judgment. The Plaintiff argued that it should be awarded statutory damages for all three claims independently.  The Court rejected awarding statutory damages for each of the three claims:

Only three courts in this Circuit appear to have reached the issue whether Plaintiffs may seek duplicative statutory damages under multiple legal theories for the same intellectual property injury. Recently, this Court adopted the recommendation and report of a magistrate judge declining to permit statutory damages under both the Copyright Act and the Lanham Act. See Computer Care Center, Inc., 2008 WL 4179653, at *9-10. Computer Care Center, Inc. in turn, cited an unpublished Memorandum and Order in Island Software & Computer Serv., Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., No. 01-CV-750, slip op. at 35 (E.D.N.Y. Jan 24, 2003), aff’d in part, vacated in part on other grounds, 413 F.3d 257 (2d Cir.2005), in which the district court held that the award of statutory damages under the Copyright and Lanham Act would constitute “an impennissible double recovery.” The Island Software court held that, “although [the defendants] may have committed ‘two wrongs,’ under the separate statutory schemes governing trademark and copyright …, those wrongs … produced one harm-[plaintiff's] economic loss.” Id. One court in this Circuit disagreed with this approach. In Microsoft Corp. v. Black Cat Computer Wholesale, Inc., 269 F.Supp.2d 118, 123-24 (W.D.N.Y.2002), the court relied on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Nintendo to grant statutory damages to the plaintiff under both the Copyright and Lanham Acts.

This Court holds that Plaintiffs are not entitled to duplicative recoveries for the same intellectual property theft under multiple theories of liability. As the Second Circuit has made clear, “[a] plaintiff seeking compensation for the same injury under different legal theories is of course entitled to only one recovery.” Indu Craft, Inc. v. Bank of Baroda, 47 F.3d 490, 497 (2d Cir.1997). In an analogous case, the Second Circuit held that a party “may not obtain a double recovery where the damages for copyright infringement and trade secret misappropriation are coextensive.” Computer Assocs. Intern., Inc. v. Altai, Inc., 982 F.2d 693, 720 (2d Cir.1992). Second, while maximizing the judgment against Defendants through duplicative statutory damages may produce a greater deterrent effect, under the facts of this case, the broad range of statutory damages available under either the Copyright Act or Lanham Act is sufficient to put potential infringers “on notice that it costs less to obey [intellectual property] laws than to violate them .” N.Y. Chinese TV Programs, Inc., 1991 WL 113283 at *4 (internal quotation marks omitted).

These principles apply with greater force when a plaintiff seeks statutory damages under multiple legal theories. “The provision for statutory damages serves a dual purpose-to compensate copyright owners and to deter potential infringers.” N.Y. Chinese TV Programs, Inc. v. U.E. Enterprises, Inc., No. 89-CV-6082, 1991 WL 113283, at*3 (S.D.N.Y. June 14, 1991) (citing Fitzgerald Publishing Co. v. Baylor Publishing Co., 807 F.2d 1110, 1117 (2d Cir.1986)). First, awarding duplicative statutory damages under different legal theories fails to serve the first aim as compensation for the same injury could be and should be accomplished under a single grant of statutory damages. See Gucci v. Duty Free Apparel, Ltd., 315 F.Supp.2d 511, 520 (S.D.N.Y.2004) (“To the extent possible statutory damages should be woven out of the same bolt of cloth as actual damages”) (internal quotation marks omitted).

*5 Here, there is no doubt that the damages sustained by Plaintiffs are coextensive; it is Defendants’ manufacture, sale, and distribution of a “cracked” version of ADELO for Restaurants that accounts for Plaintiffs’ economic damages under either of the three intellectual property statutes. Plaintiffs can recover their economic loss and the Court can impose some punitive or deterrent element of damages under any of the three Acts Defendants violated, and it is not necessary to award the same damages under all three. Accordingly, the Court concludes that Plaintiffs are not entitled to duplicative statutory damages under the Copyright Act, DMCA, and the Lanham Act. Rather, because the gravamen of this case is that Defendants sold and distributed a pirated version of Plaintiffs’ copyrighted material, the Court finds that damages under the Copyright Act to be the most
appropriate remedy. FN2

N2. The Complaint states that in “some cases” purchasers were not aware that they were using a cracked version of ALDELO for Restaurants. Compl. ¶ 12. It logically follows that most purchasers knew that they were using a pirated version of the program. Accordingly, purchasers were likely motivated by the allure of a cheaper product rather than an Aldelo-trademarked and sanctioned product. Such circumstances reinforce the primacy of the copyright violation in this case.

Copyright owner of Bernie Madoff-Yacht clip brings suit against Fox News

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Filed under News

Stadt v. Fox News Network, 09-CV-7910 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (complaint)

Hat tip to Martin Schwimmer who is consistently quicker on the S.D.N.Y. dockets than any other blogger.

Plaintiff alleged that he was the author and copyright owner of a video of Bernie Madoff on his yacht from 2003. Plaintiff asserted that he granted Fox a forty-five day exclusive license at a cost of ten thousand dollars. Plaintiff further alleged that he discovered that Fox was using the film after the end of the forty-five day period, and sent a cease and desist; thereafter, the parties agreed to an extension of the license for an additional six weeks or so at an additional fifty thousand dollars. Plaintiff alleged that he discovered that Fox continued to use the clip after the end of the extension. Plaintiff brought suit for infringement and breach of the licensing agreement.

UMG’s remaining arguments for why Veoh is not entitled to safe harbor under the DMCA rejected

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Filed under DMCA

UMG Recordings, Inc., et al. v. Veoh Networks Inc., et al., CV 07-5744 AHM (AJWx) (C.D. Cal. 2009)

We’ve discussed UMG Recordings v. Veoh three times over the past year or so.  In early January, Judge Matz of the Central District of California denied UMG’s motion for partial summary judgment finding Veoh was shielded from liability by the DMCA’s safe harbor provisions while executing four particular software functions. In February, the Court dismissed with leave to amend UMG’s secondary infringement claims against Veoh’s investors. In May, the Court again addressed the issue of secondary liability claims against Veoh investors, this time dismissing the claims with prejudice. We return once again.

On Friday, the Court addressed UMG’s remaining arguments for why Veoh was not entitled to safe harbor under the DMCA:

A defendant qualifies for safe harbor under section 512(c) of the Copyright Act if it is a “service provider” that meets the requirements set forth in sections 512(c) and 512(i). UMG does not dispute that Veoh is a “service provider” pursuant to section 512(k)(1)(B). It contends that there are genuine issues of material fact as to (1) whether Veoh expeditiously removed infringing material when it acquired actual knowledge of such material or awareness of facts from which infringing activity was apparent; (2) whether Veoh had the right and ability to control allegedly infringing activity from which it received a direct financial benefit; and (3) whether Veoh adopted and reasonably implemented a policy of terminating repeat infringers[.]

  1. On whether Veoh expeditiously removed infringing material when it aquired actual knowledge or awareness
  2. In light of the principles articulated in CCBill that the burden is on the copyright holder to provide notice of allegedly infringing material, and that it takes willful ignorance of readily apparent infringement to find a “red flag,” Veoh has provided substantial evidence that it fulfilled the requirements of section 512(c)(1)(A). UMG has provided no material evidence to the contrary.

  3. On whether Veoh had the right and ability to control allegedly infringing activity from which it received a direct financial benefit
  4. A service provider may seek the section 512(c) safe harbor only if it “does not receive a financial benefit directly attributable to the infringing activity, in a case in which the service provider has the right and ability to control such activity.” 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(1)(B). The parties’ dispute over this requirement boils down to another mixed question of fact and law: did Veoh have the “right and ability to control” the allegedly infringing activity given that (a) the allegedly infringing material resided on Veoh’s system; (b) Veoh had the ability to remove such material; (c) Veoh could have implemented, and did implement, filtering systems; and (d) Veoh could have searched for potentially infringing content? The text of the statute and the case law on this element of the safe harbor compel the Court to conclude that Veoh did not have the requisite “right
    and ability to control.”

  5. On whether Veoh adopted and reasonably implemented a policy of terminating repeat infringers
  6. A service provider is eligible for safe harbor only if it “has adopted and reasonably implemented . . . a policy that provides for the termination in appropriate circumstances of subscribers and account holders of the service provider’s system or network who are repeat infringers.” 17 U.S.C. § 512(i) (emphasis added). UMG contends that Veoh’s policy is inadequate because it does not automatically terminate users who upload videos that are blocked by the Audible Magic filter. As discussed below, this argument is unpersuasive because however beneficial the Audible Magic technology is in helping to identify infringing material, it does not meet the standard of reliability and verifiability required by the Ninth Circuit in order to justify terminating a user’s account.

The Court granted Veoh summary judgment finding that it was entitled to safe harbor under 17 U.S.C. 512(c).

zbw5mcgder

Jessica Litman: The Politics of Intellectual Property Scholarship

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Filed under Academia

Jessica Litman, the John F. Nickoll Professor of Law at the University of Michigan, has released a transcript of a talk she gave at the AALS mid-year meetings.  The talk, posted on SSRN, questions the role copyright partisanship has played in copyright scholarship, especially among nontenured professors. Says Litman:

I don’t know whether untenured scholars feel some pressure to declare allegiance to (or independence from) some side in this dispute for its own sake, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they did – whether because their senior colleague has picked a side and they fear that he or she will evaluate their work in part based on its recommendations, or because they believe that being perceived to be on a particular side is more likely to generate invitations to speak at conferences and participate in symposia.

Don’t get me wrong: there are people out there who argue that advocacy makes bad scholarship, but I am not one of them. Some of the most illuminating scholarship I’ve read has been advocacy. These days, I find myself going back again and again to the work of L. Ray Patterson, whose later work was almost entirely advocacy. 14 I gave a bunch of Ray’s arguments short shrift when I read them the first time because they were so nakedly partisan.15 A number of years later, though, I’m concluding that there was an enormous reserve of truth underlying that advocacy. 16

Indeed, the kind of article I find it most difficult to respect is the piece that casts itself, implausibly, as the sole occupant of the middle ground, usually by mischaracterizing or caricaturing the scholarship it paints as extremist on either side. So, I’m not suggesting that we’d all write better articles if we started to think non-partisan thoughts. My point is a little different: I think that knowing in advance the conclusion you need to reach – whatever it is–, while the bread and butter of law practice, usually results in legal scholarship that may be articulate and persuasive but isn’t very interesting, and doesn’t in fact advance the ball much. I think the sense that we’re in the midst of a copyright war has increased the incidence of work written to flog a familiar point of view, and has seemed to decrease scholarly risk-taking, especially if the risk might result in writing something that would give aid and comfort to the wrong side.

Court rejects due process challenge to 31.5 million dollar statutory damages award ($50k per violation) in cybersquatting case

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Filed under Damages

Verizon California Inc. v. OnlineNIC, Inc., 2009 WL 2706393 (N.D. Cal. 2009)

Judge Fogel of the federal district court in San Jose issued an order last week in which he rejected a due process challenge to a 31.5 million dollar statutory damages award. The facts of this case are not kind for OnlineNIC. Verizon obtained a default judgment against the company for cybersquatting. OnlineNIC eventually responded, seeking to set aside the default judgment.

The Court rejected the motion but required Verizon to prove the appropriate per-violation amount of statutory damages. It should also be noted that during the course of the proceedings, OnelineNIC was guilty of “numerous instances of sanctionable conduct” for “noncompliance with court orders, as well as its systematically deceptive behavior in evading service of process.”

OnlineNIC made (what the Court deemed) a “cursory” argument that Verizon’s award violated its substantive due process rights because the award was excessively disproportionate to any actual harm, or to profit it derived from the infringing domain names. The Court rejected the challenge:

There are numerous difficulties with OnlineNIC’s argument. First, the argument rests on OnlineNIC’s own assertion that it derived only $1,468.60 in profit from the use of the 663 infringing domain names. OnlineNIC’s reference to its alleged profit fails to take any account of the damages suffered by Verizon in the form of a likelihood of confusion surrounding Verizon’s marks and the diversion of internet traffic to websites selling rival products.

Moreover, OnlineNIC has made multiple false or misleadingly incomplete representations to Verizon and the Court over the course of this litigation, see, e.g., Order re. Relief from Judgment, at 16:6-9 (noting OnlineNIC’s provision of false addresses), 17:10-12 (same), 17:24-19:10 (noting Mr. Liu’s “demonstrably false representations in … sworn declarations); see also Verizon Opening Br., at 14 n. 12 (citing evidence of OnlineNIC’s repeated misrepresentations concerning the nature of its relationship with 35 Technology), making it exceedingly difficult to accept OnlineNIC’s present representations as credible.

Second, even if the figure offered by OnlineNIC were presumed to be accurate, the figure reflects only the profit purportedly derived by OnlineNIC, not by any of the numerous aliases that OnlineNIC used to register infringing domain names. See supra. Compare Bradley Decl., ¶¶ 9-28 (explaining OnlineNIC’s use of aliases and shell identities), with ShaoHong Decl., ¶ 4 (purporting to summarize “all revenues received by OnlineNIC from all monetization of the 663 domains in question”). Third, while OnlineNIC urges the Court to apply the single-digit multiplier principle endorsed in Campbell to this case, the result would wholly defeat the purpose of the statute, since the maximum available damages award would be $13,212.00, or only $19.92 per domain name. That is of course less than the statutory minimum prescribed by Congress. See 15 U.S.C. § 1117(d).

Finally, and most importantly, it is highly doubtful whether Gore and Campbell apply to statutory damages awards at all. Like the Sixth Circuit, this Court “know[s] of no case invalidating … an award of statutory damages under Gore or Campbell.” Zomba Enterprises, Inc. v. Panorama Records, Inc., 491 F.3d 574, 587 (6th Cir.2007). Under binding authority decided before Gore, “only where the [statutory] penalty prescribed is so severe and oppressive as to be wholly disproportioned to the offense and obviously unreasonable” will it violate a defendant’s due process rights. United States v. Citrin, 972 F.2d 1044, 1051 (9th Cir. 1992) (quoting St. Louis, Iron Mt. & S. Ry. Co. v. Williams, 251 U.S. 63, 66-67, 40 S.Ct. 71, 64 L.Ed. 139 (1919)); see also Zomba Enterprises, Inc., 491 F.3d at 587 (“Regardless of the uncertainty regarding the application of Gore and Campbell to statutory-damage awards, we may review such awards under [ Williams ] to ensure they comport with due process.”); Arrez v. Kelly Services, Inc., 522 F.Supp.2d 997, 1008 (N.D.Ill.2007) (“In determining whether the penalty is grossly disproportionate, ‘the fine need only bear some relationship to the offense’s gravity; this is not a proportionality inquiry.’ ” (citation omitted)).

*7 It cannot be said that the $33.15 million award bears such an impermissible relationship to OnlineNIC’s outrageously blatant and willful violation of federal law. This is particularly true when “due regard [is given to] the interests of the public, the numberless opportunities for committing the offense, and the need for securing uniform adherence” to the statute. Williams, 251 U.S. at 67; see also Centerline Equip. Corp. v. Banner Personnel Serv., Inc., 545 F.Supp.2d 768, 777 (N.D.Ill.2008) (rejecting defendant’s argument that 30,000:1 ratio between potential statutory damages and actual harm to plaintiff would violate due process, since “[t]here is no requirement that the statutory remedy be proportional to the plaintiff’s own injury [and] … Congress may choose an amount that reflects the injury to the public as well as to the individual” (citing Williams, 251 U.S. at 66)). FN3

FN3. Notably, OnlineNIC makes no argument under Williams, but states only that while “the State Farm constitutional analysis has not yet been adopted to limit statutory damages under U.S. intellectual property laws, nothing in State Farm suggest that its holding should not apply to such cases.” Opp., at 4:6-9.

With respect to whether Gore and Campbell imposed limitations beyond those found in Williams, at least one Court has concluded that since Gore and Campbell were designed essentially to constrain the otherwise “unregulated and arbitrary use of judicial power” inherent in punitive damages awards, their holdings are “not implicated [by] Congress’ carefully crafted and reasonably constrained” statutory damages regime under the copyright act and similar legislation. Lowry’s Reports, Inc. v. Legg Mason, Inc., 302 F.Supp.2d 455, 460 (D.Md.2004); see also Browning-Ferris Industries of Vermont, Inc. v. Kelco Disposal, Inc., 492 U.S. 257, 281, 109 S.Ct. 2909, 106 L.Ed.2d 219 (1989) (Brennan, J., concurring) (noting that greater scrutiny is warranted over non-legislative punitive damages awards than over damages provided for by legislative enactment).

It is not difficult to see why Gore and Campbell have not been applied in the context of statutory damages awards. First, in the context of statutory damages, the Supreme Court has held expressly that “[t]he discretion of the [district] court is wide enough to permit a resort to statutory damages for [the purpose of deterrence,] [such that] …. [e]ven for uninjurious and unprofitable invasions of copyright [,] the court may, if it deems it just, impose a liability within statutory limits to sanction and vindicate the statutory policy.” F.W. Woolworth Co. v. Contemporary Arts, 344 U.S. 228, 233, 73 S.Ct. 222, 97 L.Ed. 276 (1952) (emphasis). This suggests that ratios between actual or potential damages and punitive damages-ratios that are at the heart of Gore and Campbell-simply do not apply in the context of statutory damages.

Second, the very notion of “applying” Gore and Campbell to awards of statutory damages is problematic. Despite the use of the term “guideposts” to describe the relevant criteria for assessing the constitutionality of damages, Gore and Campbell prescribe a relatively rigid framework, one that results in considerable misalignment with the notions underlying statutory damages of the kind authorized by the ACPA and similar statutes. For example, in the context of the first guidepost-the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s conduct-“a court must consider several issues: (1) whether the harm caused was physical as opposed to economic; (2) whether the tortious conduct evinced an indifference to or a reckless disregard of the health or safety of others; (3) whether the target of the conduct was financially vulnerable; (4) whether the conduct involved repeated actions or was an isolated incident; and (5) whether the harm was the result of intentional malice, trickery, or deceit, or mere accident.” Goldsmith v. Bagby Elevator Co., Inc., 513 F.3d 1261, 1283 (11th Cir.2008) (emphasis added). Yet in the context of a typical copyright of trademark case, at least the first three of these sub-factors will be conspicuously irrelevant.

*8 The second guidepost-“the disparity between the harm or potential harm suffered by [the plaintiff] and [the] punitive damages award”-seems equally out of place, since a primary purpose of statutory damages is to facilitate-within clearly delimited parameters-the “necessarily somewhat arbitrary estimat[ion]” of the proper award where actual damages-and even “potential” damages-are difficult or impossible to determine. F.W. Woolworth Co., 344 U.S. at 232 (noting that statutory damages are intended to allow “owner of a copyright some recompense for injury done him, in a case where the rules of law render difficult or impossible proof of damages or discovery of profits”); see also Lowry’s Reports, Inc., 302 F.Supp.2d at 460 (“The Gore guideposts do not limit the statutory damages here because of the difficulties in assessing compensatory damages in this case.”).

The third “guidepost”-the difference between the remedy at issue and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases-appears to rest almost entirely on the “fair notice” aspect of the due process limitations on damages awards. As the Supreme Court noted in Campbell, “there are [both] procedural and substantive constitutional limitations” on damages awards that are punitive in nature. Campbell, 538 U.S. at 416. The procedural limitation inheres in the principle that “notions of fairness … dictate that a person receive fair notice not only of the conduct that will subject him to punishment, but also of the severity of the penalty that a State may impose.” Gore, 517 U.S. at 574. That limitation clearly has no application in the field of statutory damages awards, where the text of federal legislation explicitly discloses the range of penalties that may be awarded on a per-violation basis. Even assuming that, in certain types of cases, courts typically awarded damages in a certain range within the statutory parameters, it is difficult to argue that a defendant lacks notice of the potential severity of damages when the law explicitly identifies a maximum per-violation penalty and commits the determination of the proper amount of such penalty to the discretion of the trial judge.

Notwithstanding the imperfect fit between the Gore/Campbell framework and several of the principles animating the ACPA’s statutory damages regime, it is not inconceivable that Gore and Campbell could “apply,” in some respect, in the present context. “Although statutory damages amounts might be calculated in part to compensate for actual losses that are difficult to quantify, they are often also motivated in part by a pseudo-punitive intention to ‘address and deter overall public harm.’ ” Parker v. Time Warner Entm’t Co., L.P., 331 F.3d 13, 26 (2d Cir.2003) (quoting Texas v. Am. Blastfax, Inc., 121 F.Supp.2d 1085, 1090 (W.D.Tex.2000)); see also Cass County Music Co., 88 F.3d at 643 (“[S]tatutory damages have evolved and now are intended not only to put the plaintiff in the position he would have been but for the infringement, but also, and arguably preeminently, to punish [and deter] the defendant.”). In that respect, while courts frequently do consider whether a defendant has engaged in a pattern of registering or using large numbers of domain names that infringe the rights of other parties, see supra Section II.B.3, the Supreme Court has explained that a defendant should not be punished “for being an unsavory individual or business,” and that “[d]ue process does not permit courts, in the calculation of punitive damages, to adjudicate the merits of other parties’ hypothetical claims against a defendant ….” Campbell, 538 U.S. at 423. Thus, while the defendant’s wrongful conduct against others certainly could be a relevant factor-for example, in assessing just how reprehensible the defendant’s conduct towards the plaintiff should be deemed under the circumstances-a court authorizing an award that reaches well into realm of punitive or deterrence-oriented damages must be careful not to punish the defendant for wrongful acts other than to those committed against the plaintiff.

*9 Among the material submitted by Verizon to support the original damages award of $50,000 per violation is evidence that OnlineNIC runs a “massive cybersquatting operation.” See supra Section III.B.3. Viewed in this light, OnlineNIC would appear to embody the notion of an “unsavory … business,” but that is something for which it may not be punished, as such, under Campbell. At the same time, however, it is clear that “a recidivist may be punished more severely than a first offender[,] [since] … repeated misconduct is more reprehensible than an individual instance of malfeasance.” Campbell, 538 U.S. at 423. In the context of civil damages, a court entering an essentially punitive award on the basis of “repeated misconduct” need only “ensure [that] the conduct in question replicates the prior transgressions.” Id. (quoting Gore, 517 U.S. at 577). Here, the wrongful conduct against other parties-the registration of many thousands of domain names that infringe those parties’ famous marks-is precisely the conduct that has harmed Verizon. To the extent that the original damages award reflects a recognition of the extent of OnlineNIC’s illegal activities, it does so not by “adjudicat[ing] the merits of other parties’ hypothetical claims,” id. at 423, but by placing a gloss of additional culpability on OnlineNIC’s conduct towards Verizon.

Finally, the original award furthers the important statutory goal of deterrence. Cf. St. Luke’s Cataract and Laser Institute, P.A. v. Sanderson, 573 F.3d 1186, 2009 WL 1955609, at *15 (11th Cir.2009) (observing that “the ACPA’s statutory damages provision to contain[s] a deterrence element similar to copyright law”); E. & J. Gallo Winery v. Spider Webs Ltd., 286 F.3d 270, 278 (5th Cir.2002) (noting that copyright statutory damages provision “is designed to discourage wrongful conduct” and affirming statutory damages award of $25,000 under the ACPA, even though plaintiff did not suffer any actual injury). Here, although evidence of actual deterrence is not required to support a statutory damages award designed to deter OnlineNIC and others from future misconduct, Verizon has represented to the Court that the number of domain names that infringe its famous marks has decreased substantially since the entry of the default judgment on December 19, 2008, and OnlineNIC admits that “publicity about the massive judgment against [it] … gain[ed] much attention” in Asia beginning in late December 2008. The judgment amount-which is fully supported by considerations relevant to the determination of statutory damages awards under the ACPA-thus also serves the important statutory goal of deterrence. Cf. Campbell, 538 U.S. at 417 (noting the unconstitutionality of awards that “further[ ] no legitimate purpose and [therefore] constitute[ ] an arbitrary deprivation of property”).

For all of the foregoing reasons, the Court concludes that the original $33.15 million damages award does not violate OnlineNIC’s due process rights.

LIVE365 files Appointments Clause challenge to the Copyright Royalty Board

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Filed under Appointments Clause, Copyright Royalty Board

LIVE365, Inc. v. Copyright Royalty Board, et al., 09-cv-01662-RBW (D.C. Cir. 2009)

On August 29, internet broadcaster LIVE365 filed a complaint in the D.C. Circuit arguing that the appointment of the Copyright Royalty Board transgresses the Appointments Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The complaint prayed for an injunction staying all proceedings before the CRB and a declaratory judgment. LIVE365 argued that:

(i) the Copyright Royalty Judges are principal officers who must be appointed by the President of the United States because they are not removable at will and their decisions are not reversible by the Librarian of Congress or any other Executive Branch official, or in the alternative, (ii) the Copyright Royalty Judges are inferior officers who must be appointed, inter alia, by a Head of Department, and the Librarian of Congress, as a member of the Legislative Branch, is not a Head of Department.

Previous posts at Exclusive Rights on an Appointments Clause challenge to the Copyright Royalty Board:

Third Circuit provides gloss on Warner-Lambert

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Filed under License v. Contract, Licensing, Trade Secret

Nova Chemicals, Inc. v. Sekisui Plastics Co., Ltd., 2009 WL 2634762 (3d Cir. 2009)

There was an interesting decision from the Third Circuit last week (Jordan, Nygaard, Fuentes writing) that addressed what types of provisions in a trade secret licensing agreement are binding after the trade secret is no longer confidential. To briefly review, if you enter an agreement to license a copyright or patent and the term in the intellectual property right expires, you’re no longer obligated to continue to make royalty payments. The licensing agreement would terminate with the expiration of the exclusive rights in the underlying patent or copyright. See, e.g., Brulotte v. Thys Co., 379 U.S. 29 (1964) (finding that the obligation to pay  royalties in return for the use of a patented device may not extend beyond the life of the patent.)

Things aren’t as simple in the context of trade secret, which has a potentially indefinite term. The landmark case in this area is Warner-Lambert Pharm. Co. v. John J. Reynolds, Inc., 178 F.Supp. 655, 665-66 (S.D.N.Y.1959), aff’d 280 F.2d 197 (2d Cir.1960) (per curiam) (adopting District Court opinion), where a company licensed the secret formula for Listerine for seventy-five years. After the formula was disclosed to the public, the licensor refused to make additional payments for the former trade secret. The S.D.N.Y. held that the licensor was still obligated to pay for the license, finding that “one who acquires a secret formula or a trade secret through a valid and binding contract … [may not] escape from an obligation to which he bound himself simply because the secret is discovered by a third party or by the general public.”

In Nova Chemicals, inc. v. Sekisui Plastics, Inc., a company agreed to license proprietary technology to produce a Styrofoam product. The propreitary technology was protected by patent and trade secret, both of which expired during the course of the agreement; the patent via term, the trade secret via disclosure. 

The licensing agreement between the two parties stated that the licensor couldn’t market the Styrofoam products derived from the trade secret in Asia. The Licensor brought suit seeking a declaratory judgment that it could market in the region. 

The Third Circuit found that, unlike in Warner-Lambert and Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil Co, the “language of the License Agreement, and its surrounding circumstances” showed that the parties didn’t intend the Asia provision “to survive the expiration of Sekisui’s intellectual property.” The Court instead read the provision as a limitation on the scope of the license, and not as bargained for consideration for disclosure.  As such, the Court found that NOVA chemicals could market products that incorporated the disclosed trade secret in Asia.

In both Aronson and Warner-Lambert, the courts focused on aspects of the agreements that evinced an intent to create ongoing obligations after the life of the relevant intellectual property. In Aronson, the parties understood that the relevant trade secrets would be destroyed as soon as the product was manufactured. 440 U.S. at 259. Nevertheless, the parties explicitly agreed to ongoing royalty payments even if a pending patent application failed. Id. Further, the parties clearly delineated the consideration applicable to the patent-license portion of the agreement and the trade-secret license portion of the agreement. Id. In Warner-Lambert, Warner-Lambert agreed
to ongoing royalty payments as long as it continued to manufacture Listerine, instead of setting a fixed end date or otherwise limiting its obligation to continue paying. 178 F.Supp. at 660. In both cases, the Court found that the licensor agreed to disclose secret information to a manufacturer in exchange for ongoing consideration.

Here, in contrast, nothing in the License Agreement suggests that the parties intended any ongoing obligations with respect to trade secrets after the 1995 termination of NOVA’s obligation to maintain the secrecy of Sekisui’s technical information. While Sekisui argues that it only agreed to disclose its trade secrets and to train NOVA personnel in exchange for NOVA’s ongoing promise to stay out of Asia (in addition to lump sum and royalty payments), the terms of the License Agreement belie this argument. The Asia exception appears as a limitation on the scope of NOVA’s rights under Sekisui’s intellectual property, rather than as an independent restriction or as consideration for trade secret disclosures.FN13

Further, Sekisui disclosed its trade secrets during the option period. If NOVA had chosen not to exercise its option to acquire a ten-year license to manufacture Piocelan products, Sekisui’s trade secrets would have been protected for only five years after NOVA rejected the license. In this circumstance, the Asia exception never would have come into force at all; NOVA would have been undisputably free to make use of Sekisui’s trade secrets after five years and to market Piocelan products anywhere in the world as soon as Sekisui’s patents expired. Thus, if it was intended as consideration at all, the Asia exception could only have been consideration for a license under Sekisui’s patent rights and to use Sekisui’s trade secrets during the period they remained protected, rather than for the initial disclosure of those trade secrets.

*10 Finally, none of the extrinsic evidence supplied by the parties suggests that they intended the Asia exception to be a stand-alone provision, or any terms of the License Agreement to survive the expiration of Sekisui’s patent rights and NOVA’s secrecy obligations with respect to the trade secrets.

Nimmer and Patry treatise battle royale in order finding that Superman termination notice valid

1
Filed under Termination

Siegel v. Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., CV-04-8400-SGL (RZx),  2009 WL 2512842 (C.D. Cal. 2009)

Judge Larson issued a mammoth decision last week that addressed whether the copyrights in certain early Superman works were validly terminated. The plaintiffs failed to list two week’s worth of newspaper strips in their termination notice.  The strips, first published in the Milwaukee News Journal in 1939, were especially valuable because they were the first material to name Superman’s home planet of Krypton and present the back story behind its destruction.

The plaintiffs acknowledged that they forgot to include the two weeks of strips in their termination notice but argued that the strips were covered under a catch-all provision in the notice:

This Notice of Termination applies to each and every work (in any medium whatsoever, whenever created) that includes or embodies any character, story element, or indicia reasonably associated with SUPERMAN or the SUPERMAN stories, such as, without limitation, Superman, . . . the planet Krypton . . . . Every reasonable effort has been made to find and list herein every such SUPERMAN-related work ever created. Nevertheless, if any such work has been omitted, such omission is unintentional and involuntary, and this Notice also applies to each and every such omitted work.

Copyright Office regulations set forth that a termination must include a  ”complete and unambiguous statement of facts . . . without incorporation by reference of information in other documents or records,” 37 C.F.R. § 201.10(b)(2), with:

1. the name of each grantee whose rights are being terminated or the grantee’s successor in title, and each address at which service is made;
2. the title and the name of at least one author of, and the date copyright was originally secured in, each work to which the notice applies (including, if available, the copyright registration number);
3. a brief statement reasonably identifying the grant being terminated;
4. the effective date of the termination; and
5. the name, actual signature, and address of the person executing the termination.
37 C.F.R. §§ 201.10(b)(1)-(1), (c)(1), and (c)(4).

The Court noted that the regs contain a “safety valve” which states that  “[h]armless errors in a notice that do not materially affect the adequacy of the information required to serve the purposes of [the statute] shall not render the notice invalid.” 37 C.F.R. § 201.10(e)(1).

Music Sales Corp. v. Morris

As precedent, the Court looked to Music Sales Corp. v. Morris, 73 F. Supp. 2d 364 (S.D.N.Y. 1999), where the Southern District of New York found that a boilerplate statement that didn’t “reasonably identify[] the grant” was nonetheless adequate.

Copyright treatise battle royale

The Court framed the issue as a battle between Nimmer and Patry.  The Court presented Nimmer as an advocate for a hard-line rule:

[T]he Register of Copyrights does not pass judgment by accepting notices of termination, so that the ministerial act of filing them connotes no approval of their verbiage. On that basis, the court’s citation to authority allowing agencies to interpret statutory requirements is inapposite. But the court also cites unspecified custom of the industry as validating the boilerplate approach. It remains to test what that custom might be. 3 NIMMER ON COPYRIGHT § 11.06[B] at 11-40.22 – 11.40.22(1).

The Court painted Patry as representing the opposite end of the spectrum:

In Music Sales Corp. v. Morris, the requirement of a ‘brief statement reasonably identifying the grant to which the terminated grant applies’ was reviewed, with the court wisely accepting industry custom and Copyright Office practices as indicating compliance. PATRY ON COPYRIGHT § 7:45

Having framed the two ends of the debate, the Court stated that it was splitting the difference in finding that the transfer was valid:

On the one hand, the Nimmer approach, i.e., an insistence on rigid adherence to the formalities specified in the regulations or, on the other hand, the less formalistic (but more practical), lax approach set forth in Music Sales and endorsed by Patry, i.e., acceptance of industry and agency custom. The Court declines to choose one extreme or the other, applying instead a middle path that requires a more fact-intensive inquiry in applying the harmless error safety valve.

Here, it is clear to the Court that plaintiffs undertook enormous effort to comply with the overly formalist requirements of the termination provisions, literally providing 546 pages’ worth of works subject to the termination notice. The purpose of the regulations is to give the recipient of the termination notice sufficient information to understand what rights of theirs may or may not be at stake. Here, any recipient of the termination notice would quickly understand that the plaintiffs have sought to reclaim the copyright in any and all Superman works ever created. Indeed, any publisher receiving the notice would be foolish to believe otherwise. That the termination notice included a broad and comprehensive catch-all clause only reinforces that which the 546-page listing of titles of works subject to the notice makes painfully obvious.

This reasoning is all the more sound because what was sought to be
recaptured involved the rights to works involving a particular character that has been continuously exploited for decades. It is this peculiar nature of the subject matter of the termination notice that makes rigid adherence to the regulatory formalities particularly inapt: In the case of works consisting of a series or containing characters requiring the terminating party to list separately each work in the series or all works in which the character appears would render the termination right meaningless. Instead, notice that reasonably puts the terminated party on notice of the character being terminated is sufficient. 3 PATRY ON COPYRIGHT § 7:45.