PDA

View Full Version : US Supreme Court: authors of file sharing software liable for copyright infringment


Awake
06-27-2005, 01:50 PM
The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that developers of software violate federal copyright law when they provide computer users with the means to share music and movie files downloaded from the internet.Q.v. http://www.scotusblog.com/movabletype/archives/2005/06/grokster_stream.html and http://www.scotusblog.com/movabletype/archives/2005/06/new_challenge_t.html for further discussion.

The Opinion (http://wid.ap.org/scotus/pdf/04-480P.ZO.pdf) was written by Justice Souter, which should come as great news for P2P enthusiasts, insofar as it is narrowly-tailored, and leaves the door ajar rather than slamming it shut on file sharing.

Much as I dislike Justice Souter's views on most matters, he's an elegant writer, and this Opinion is no exception. This is a short Opinion (25 pages) which is very accessable and readable, even for the layman (i.e., go read it!) but for those too lazy to bother, here's the guts of it:

The question considered by the Court was:The question is under what circumstances the distributor of a product capable of both lawful and unlawful use is liable for acts of copyright infringement by third parties using the product.The court's answer is as follows:We hold that one who distributes a device with the object of promoting its use to infringe copyright, as shown by clear expression or other affirmative steps taken to foster infringement, is liable for the resulting acts of infringement by third parties.(Slip op. at 2) (Cf. United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, at 745 (http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=case&court=us&vol=481&page=739#745)). The Court accepted that there were valid uses for P2P technology, but was satisfied with MGM's evidence that:the vast majority of users’ downloads are acts of infringement, and because well over 100 million copies of the software in question are known to have been downloaded, and billions of files are shared across the FastTrack and Gnutella networks each month, the probable scope of copyright infringement is staggering (Slip Op., at 5). The Court further dispensed with the fiction that Grokster viewed their software's legitimate uses as its primary use:The record is replete with evidence that from the moment Grokster and StreamCast began to distribute their free software, each one clearly voiced the objective that recipients use it to download copyrighted works, and each took active steps to encourage infringement. (Id. at 6). For example:StreamCast’s executives monitored the number of songs by certain commercial artists available on their networks, and an internal communication indicates they aimed to have a larger number of copyrighted songs available on their networks than other file-sharing networks. See A&M Records v. Napster, 114 F. Supp. 2d 896. ...Similarly, Grokster sent users a newsletter promoting its ability to provide particular, popular copyrighted materials. (Id. at 8; citation clarified).

Fundamentally, the Court's view is:The argument for imposing indirect liability in this case is, however, a powerful one, given the number of infringing downloads that occur every day using StreamCast'’s and Grokster’'s software. When a widely shared service or product is used to commit infringement, it may be impossible to enforce rights in the protected work effectively against all direct infringers, the only practical alternative being to go against the distributor of the copying device for secondary liability on a theory of contributory or vicarious infringement.[Id., at 12] ...[today we hold that] one who distributes a device with the object of promoting its use to infringe copyright, as shown by clear expression or other affirmative steps taken to foster infringement, is liable for the resulting acts of infringement by third parties.[Id. at 19]Again, this is only a brief summary, it excludes a lot of the reasoning so the best thing to do is to read the opinion.

Sk
06-27-2005, 05:08 PM
From what I've read, it seems that nothing changes, right? Anyway, I'm in the EU, and I don't remember what the lwas are this month. They keep changing the reading every week; I think that today I can download something, but I'm not completely sure.

Liquid Shadow
06-27-2005, 06:23 PM
Should we put those who invented and/or those who manufacture various types of guns on death row because they are responsible for criminals using guns to kill innocent people?


If Henry Ford were alive, would it be logical to sue him for any injuries or deaths caused as a result of defects in automobiles? (I'm aware that he didn't invent the automobile, although some people believe so, but I'm just using him as an example)

Awake
06-27-2005, 07:48 PM
Should we put those who invented and/or those who manufacture various types of guns on death row because they are responsible for criminals using guns to kill innocent people?


If Henry Ford were alive, would it be logical to sue him for any injuries or deaths caused as a result of defects in automobiles? (I'm aware that he didn't invent the automobile, although some people believe so, but I'm just using him as an example)Neither of those are appropriate analogs, for obvious reasons if you read the opinion. I will simply repost my response to the same challenge over at the JP forum (http://www.petrucciforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=23602&page=2):

The technology, Souter makes clear, is not illegal in and of itself; much to MGM's disappointment, I'm sure, Sony is not overruled (n1). The problem was the explicit complicity of Grokster and StreamCast in marketing their product to people attempting to violate copyright.

The gun issue is separate and distinct, and a false comparison. First, there is no equivalent to the Second Amendment which restrains the ability of Congress or the State Legislatures to curb file sharing (n2). Second, to make the situation analagous, if one applies a notional "Grokster Rule" to gun manufacturers, that rule would hold that gun manufacturers sold weapons and specifically targeted vigilantes or murderers. Guns are legal, killing people other than in narrowly-defined self-defense situations is not; therefore, if you sell guns and have an ad campaign that says "go out and shoot yourselves some folks" - as opposed to, say, "perfect weapon for home defense", or "will shoot the antlers off a dear at 600 yards" - or you sell silencers in South Central L.A. with the display slogan "kill some homies, don't make a sound" (n3) - Grokster says that you might be liable for charges.

Even if gun ownership were not protected by the second amendment, it would still be safe in Grokster-land, since there are valid and legal uses for guns, just as there are - as Souter's opinion makes clear - valid and legal uses of P2P. It is the encouragement and direct intent to facilitate illegal use that renders Grokster and StreamCast liable. A better analog would be police radar detectors - a technology which has no conceivable legitimate use. Under Grokster, these appear to be on very, very thin ice, and seem supported only by the difficulty of framing an appropriate legal challenge.

~sjd

Notes:

n1. This is what I meant by it being good news for today's losers that Souter wrote for the Court - a more expansive Opinion, such as the Chief might have delivered, might have slammed the door, rather than leaving it ajar

n2. This is not a First Amendment issue, any more than libel laws are in violation of the First Amendment; both libel and copyright laws existed at the time the first amendment was ratified, they remained in existence for over two hundred years, there's simply no argument to be made here for the first amendment.

n3. This is a bad example, since that would likely constitute criminal incitement, but you see the point.

Enigma™
06-27-2005, 11:27 PM
May be a bad example, but when's the last time that someone was killed directly by someone else downloading a Britney Spears song?

BlobVanDam
06-27-2005, 11:31 PM
May be a bad example, but when's the last time that someone was killed directly by someone else downloading a Britney Spears song?


I think downloading Britney Spears is directly harmful to everyone who has to hear it.

Enigma™
06-27-2005, 11:47 PM
I think downloading Britney Spears is directly harmful to everyone who has to hear it.
Touché my friend, Touché.

Thefunkygibbons
06-29-2005, 04:00 AM
At the end of the day, I think industry will get most of the sites shut down

Big business versus a bloke in his bedroom is not a fair fight

So we will all end up sharing boots by snail mail again

Awake
06-29-2005, 10:09 AM
At the end of the day, I think industry will get most of the sites shut down

Big business versus a bloke in his bedroom is not a fair fight

So we will all end up sharing boots by snail mail againI suspect the next step will be that P2P software writers will simply make very sure that they market their products as "a great way to share academic documents", in much the same way that cannabis paraphanalia is sold - perfectly legally - under the proviso that it is "for tobacco use only".

The industry won't be able to cap this entirely until such time as it discovers a way to flat-out prevent CDs from being ripped to data formats, and imposes DRM on every data format available. Who will "win" in the long term will depend on how determined tbe industry is, vs. how determined the people who want to keep ripping off artists by downloading their music for free without permission are.

Enc3f4L0
06-29-2005, 12:57 PM
Neither of those are appropriate analogs, for obvious reasons if you read the opinion. I will simply repost my response to the same challenge over at the JP forum (http://www.petrucciforum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=23602&page=2):

The technology, Souter makes clear, is not illegal in and of itself; much to MGM's disappointment, I'm sure, Sony is not overruled (n1). The problem was the explicit complicity of Grokster and StreamCast in marketing their product to people attempting to violate copyright.

The gun issue is separate and distinct, and a false comparison. First, there is no equivalent to the Second Amendment which restrains the ability of Congress or the State Legislatures to curb file sharing (n2). Second, to make the situation analagous, if one applies a notional "Grokster Rule" to gun manufacturers, that rule would hold that gun manufacturers sold weapons and specifically targeted vigilantes or murderers. Guns are legal, killing people other than in narrowly-defined self-defense situations is not; therefore, if you sell guns and have an ad campaign that says "go out and shoot yourselves some folks" - as opposed to, say, "perfect weapon for home defense", or "will shoot the antlers off a dear at 600 yards" - or you sell silencers in South Central L.A. with the display slogan "kill some homies, don't make a sound" (n3) - Grokster says that you might be liable for charges.

Even if gun ownership were not protected by the second amendment, it would still be safe in Grokster-land, since there are valid and legal uses for guns, just as there are - as Souter's opinion makes clear - valid and legal uses of P2P. It is the encouragement and direct intent to facilitate illegal use that renders Grokster and StreamCast liable. A better analog would be police radar detectors - a technology which has no conceivable legitimate use. Under Grokster, these appear to be on very, very thin ice, and seem supported only by the difficulty of framing an appropriate legal challenge.

~sjd

Notes:

n1. This is what I meant by it being good news for today's losers that Souter wrote for the Court - a more expansive Opinion, such as the Chief might have delivered, might have slammed the door, rather than leaving it ajar

n2. This is not a First Amendment issue, any more than libel laws are in violation of the First Amendment; both libel and copyright laws existed at the time the first amendment was ratified, they remained in existence for over two hundred years, there's simply no argument to be made here for the first amendment.

n3. This is a bad example, since that would likely constitute criminal incitement, but you see the point.


I won't get into much of the legal terms and just toss out my humble 0.02.

I actually thought in a similar way for those analogies...

You know why GUN manufacturers aren't going to court for second liability? Because killing innocent people isn't taking away money from major labels. On the contrary, GUN industry makes loads of money.

That whole "It's the way you advertise and not the possible harm in the product itself" is total BS IMO.

It's convenient that Grokster and StreamCast advertise in such a way... Only then you could take something like this to court and have arguments to eliminate big sources of moneyloss.

Either way, all stays the same... Happened to Napster and 30 other P2P emerged... They'll try to fight off 1 by 1 only to discover the war is lost... File sharing is here to stay.

Sk
06-29-2005, 05:06 PM
Well, Awake, industries can do what they want. For the data to be readable, they need to be copiable and therefore rippable. One could eventually modify his own CD player and draw the bit stream directly from what it sends to the audio transducers. Maybe this will be done by only ten people in the world, who will share the song all over the world, for it to be "public domain" in less than a week.

Georges
06-29-2005, 09:43 PM
I wouldn't see that all so black. In fact, the piracy race will never be won nor lost. Piracy will always find its way (so far it has always done so) and music industry (for me: the big record companies) will always lag behind. Moreover, the latter fails (if not even refuses) to actually adapt their distribution channels in such a way that music becomes affordable and accessible to everyone.

It would have been far more interesting for the music industry to obtain fee payments (based on the number of song sharing via the platform) from those P2P software distributors because the music industry acts as a content provider. That wouldn't hurt the music industry's image and it would still force P2P software distributors to redistribute the fees to their users or to put limits into their software (such as limiting the maximum size/number of files to be shared, to reduce the download speed for big files drastically, etc.).

Maybe some day one would have seen arise a new distribution channel that way, but now the piracy race will continue and the music industry doesn't know where that will lead. Maybe one day they regret not to have tried to deal with the P2P problem ...