Tuesday, July 18, 2023

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Instagram Not Liable For Copyright Infringement Over Embedded Images
Andy Maxwell, 18 Jul 12:46 PM

insta-logoIn common with content created in other fields, photographs generally enjoy protection under copyright law, allowing photographers to determine who can duplicate and/or distribute their work.

Photographers Alexis Hunley and Matthew Brauer posted several of their copyrighted works on Instagram. In January 2016, Time published an article titled 'These Photographers Are Covering the Presidential Campaign on Instagram.' Within that article, Time embedded one of Brauer's Instagram posts, which contained a copyrighted photograph of Hillary Clinton to which Brauer owned the copyright.

In June 2020, during the Black Lives Matter protests, BuzzFeed News published an article titled "17 Powerful Pictures Of The Protests Through The Eyes of Black Photographers." Within that article was a photograph taken by Alexis Hunley, displayed via an embedded post from Hunley's Instagram page.

Time did not seek permission from Brauer or Instagram to embed the photograph of Hillary Clinton. BuzzFeed News did not seek permission or attempt to license Hunley's photograph taken during the protests. Outraged at losing control over where their works appeared, Hunley and Brauer filed a class action lawsuit against Instagram for allowing their images to be displayed on third-party sites without permission from the copyright holder.

Copyright Claims Against Instagram

The photographers' main target was Instagram, which Hunley accused of "intentionally and brazenly" encouraging and assisting third-party sites to display copyrighted works, while making no effort to stop the "rampant infringement".

The complaint accused Instagram of inducement of copyright infringement, contributory copyright infringement, and vicarious copyright infringement. Time and BuzzFeed News stood accused of violating Hunley's right of display. Hunley sought damages for the alleged infringement and an injunction to prevent further violations.

At the district court, the complaint was found to have fundamental flaws, which Instagram laid bare in its motion to dismiss. At BuzzFeed News, the location where Hunley's image was displayed, there could be no violation of Hunley's exclusive display right under the Copyright Act. To be found liable, an alleged infringer must display a copy of a copyrighted work; in this case, the photographs were embedded and were always stored on Instagram's servers. The district court commented as follows:

"[BuzzFeed and Time] do not violate Instagram users' exclusive display rights. Because they do not store the images and videos, they do not 'fix' the copyrighted work in any 'tangible medium of expression.' Therefore, when they embed the images and videos, they do not display 'copies' of the copyrighted work."

All of Hunley's copyright claims alleged secondary liability but such claims cannot exist when there is no direct infringement. Hunley's original and first amended complaints both stated that Instagram hosted the images; that proved terminal as far as the district court was concerned. In February 2022, Hunley was denied leave to amend the complaint because the deficiencies were simply too great. The case was dismissed and Hunley appealed.

Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

In an opinion published on Monday, the Court references its own decision in the Perfect 10 v. Amazon, Inc. (pdf) case in 2007.

Perfect 10, a publisher of copyrighted nude images, alleged that Amazon and Google infringed its rights when they displayed thumbnail images of Perfect 10's photographic works. Google did not host or store the main images that appeared in users' web browsers, they were embedded from the source servers, just like the photographers' posts were on Instagram.

"Applying the Server Test to the facts, we concluded that Google's in-line linking (what we now call embedding) did not display a 'copy' of Perfect 10's copyrighted images as that term is defined in the Copyright Act," the opinion reads. "Although 'Google may [have] facilitate[d] the user's access to infringing images,' we concluded that 'such assistance . . . does not constitute direct infringement."

Hunley argued that the 'Server Test' should not apply to social media platforms but since "Perfect 10 states the rule for infringing the public display right using embedding" the argument was not considered. The opinion does rule out both direct and secondary infringement, however.

By posting photographs to her public Instagram profile, Hunley stored a copy of those images on Instagram's servers. By displaying Hunley's images, Instagram did not directly infringe Hunley's exclusive display right because Instagram had a nonexclusive sublicense to display these photos.

Because BuzzFeed and Time embedded — but did not store — the underlying copyrighted photographs, they are not guilty of direct infringement. Without direct infringement, Hunley cannot prevail on any theory of secondary liability.

"For the foregoing reasons, we find no error in the judgment of the district court," the opinion concludes (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

US Court: When IPTV Pirates Reap Profit, CDN Attracts Pirates & Profits
Andy Maxwell, 17 Jul 09:16 PM

IPTVIn February 2022, U.S. broadcaster DISH Network filed a $32.5m lawsuit against DataCamp, claiming that the UK-based CDN company failed to take action against copyright-infringing customers.

The complaint, filed in an Illinois district court, alleged that pirate IPTV services Banjo TV, Bollywood IPTV, Comstar TV, Express IPTV, Gennie TV, Gold TV, IPGuys, Istar, Red IPTV, Sky IPTV, and Zumm TV, were all customers of DataCamp.

DISH informed the court that despite sending "hundreds of notices" requesting the removal of content under the DMCA, plus copies of lawsuits and judgments relating to pirate IPTV services, DataCamp failed to "adopt and reasonably implement" a repeat infringer policy.

In an August 2022 motion to dismiss, DataCamp countered that it forwarded takedown notices to the relevant customers while encryption meant it had zero knowledge of its customers' activities.

New Motion to Dismiss

The parties later confirmed that DISH had served requests for production on DataCamp, which included copies of invoices and support tickets for the pirate IPTV services named in the complaint. Amid ongoing settlement discussions, the Court dismissed DataCamp's motion to dismiss late March 2023, without prejudice to later refiling.

Fact discovery deadlines were extended but with no settlement reached, DataCamp again filed a motion to dismiss, leading to further extensions of time being granted by the Court. On July 12, 2023, DISH was granted permission to depose Tomas Bacik, DataCamp's Head of Sales & Client Solutions, DataCamp director Simon Rybisar, and DataCamp chief Zdenek Cendra. Two days later, the Court ruled on DataCamp's motion to dismiss.

Memorandum Opinion and Order

DataCamp's motion argued that allegations in the complaint of contributory and vicarious copyright infringement under 17 U.S.C. § 501 failed to state a claim.

DISH alleged that DataCamp ignored or turned a blind eye to its pirate IPTV customers' "willful and repeated infringement" despite "having knowledge" of the infringement and the ability to prevent it. DISH believes that DataCamp is therefore both contributorily and vicariously liable since it profited from infringement while having the ability to prevent it.

Knowledge of Infringement, Failure to Prevent

A defendant like DataCamp can be held liable for contributory infringement when it has knowledge of the infringing activities of a third party, and induces, causes, or materially contributes to it.

According to DISH, 400 DMCA notices detailing the name of the pirate IPTV services, the channels allegedly infringed, plus the IP addresses, domain names, URLs used to transmit the works, and packet capture logs, were sufficient to establish knowledge.

DataCamp said the infringement notices provided "at most" a "general knowledge" that future infringement is likely, meaning that it had no duty to prevent it.

In his memorandum opinion and order dated July 12, 2023, United States District Judge John F. Kness says the hundreds of notices sent by DISH contained "ample information" that would have allowed DataCamp to prevent infringement.

"The notices named the Pirate Service, the infringing Works being broadcasted, and the IP addresses, URLs, and domain names being used to transmit the infringing works. This information provided Defendant with sufficient knowledge to act against the infringing Pirate Services—in other words, with knowledge of specific infringing uses," the order reads.

Judge Kness also rejects the argument that encryption prevented DataCamp from viewing the infringing materials; the infringement notices themselves provided DataCamp with knowledge of the infringement. The Judge also notes additional evidence to support the allegation that DataCamp knew about the infringement.

In its complaint, DISH alleged that it had previously served DataCamp with a court order requiring it to disable IP addresses associated with pirate IPTV services, yet DataCamp failed to do so promptly. The Judge also cites comments from DataCamp's CEO in 2019, which appeared to acknowledge that the company needed to be "more strict" with its customers.

Coupled with DISH's allegations that DataCamp only forwarded some of the infringement notices, and in any event, the pirate IPTV services continued to infringe, DataCamp's motion to dismiss the contributory infringement claims was denied.

Vicarious Infringement

A defendant like DataCamp can be held liable for vicarious infringement when it has the right and ability to supervise infringing activity and has a direct financial interest in it. In its motion to dismiss, DataCamp claimed that the allegations in the complaint fail to meet that standard.

Highlighting terms in DataCamp's service agreement, DISH said that DataCamp could have terminated its business with the pirate IPTV providers for any reason. Alternative options could have seen DataCamp verify the services' rights to distribute the copyrighted works, ensure compliance with the infringement notices, implement a repeat infringer policy, or implement a geo-blocking system to prevent access to the streams in the United States.

DataCamp did not argue that it lacked the right to supervise the infringing activity. The company said it lacked the ability and the plaintiff's proposals to prevent infringement were either "impossible" or "far too overbroad." Judge Kness found no need to consider any of the alternatives proposed by DISH.

"Defendant could directly stop the infringement by terminating access to the CDN," the Judge writes.

"None of the authorities cited by Defendant support the proposition that terminating access is an overbroad remedy. Accordingly, the Court need not consider Plaintiff's alternative proposed remedies. The complaint adequately alleges that Defendant had the ability to stop the infringement."

Direct Financial Interest

DISH's complaint alleges that the pirate IPTV services offer its channels at an artificially low price, which encourages end users to subscribe to the services. In turn, this increases the bandwidth consumed at DataCamp and the scale of the payments received by the CDN company. Due to DataCamp's "lax policy" towards infringement, pirate IPTV services are motivated to sign up and continue to do business with DataCamp, meaning that bandwidth consumption increases, while payments for that bandwidth increase too.

DataCamp's position is that "attracting users" and "increasing the value of its business" are "too far removed from the alleged infringement to be considered a 'direct' financial interest." According to Judge Ness, everything boils down to whether there is "a causal relationship between the infringing activity and any financial benefit a defendant reaps, regardless of how substantial that benefit is."

Noting that DataCamp is paid directly by the pirate IPTV services and that payments received are related to the amount of bandwidth consumed by the pirate services' customers, the infringing activity induces end users to consume more bandwidth, Judge Ness notes. He, therefore, concludes that DataCamp obtained a direct financial benefit and that the allegations in the complaint establish a causal relationship between infringement and profit.

"The profits reaped from infringement also attracts new Pirate Services to Defendant's CDN and incentives current Pirate Services to remain with the CDN, meaning more profit for Defendant. Accordingly, Defendant's motion to dismiss Plaintiff's claim for vicarious infringement is denied," Judge Kness concludes.

With that, DataCamp's motion to dismiss was denied in full.

The memorandum opinion and order is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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