Kellman v. Spokeo, Inc., 2022 WL 1157500, No. 3:21-cv-08976-WHO (N.D. Cal. Apr. 19, 2022)
Spokeo’s website “provides
information about particular individuals aggregated from various sources. To
advertise paid subscriptions, Spokeo uses “teasers”—profiles of real people
with some information redacted. The plaintiffs in this putative class action alleged
that this violated their rights of publicity and appropriated their names and
likenesses in violation of California, Ohio, and Indiana law. The court denied
Spokeo’s motion to dismiss, finding Article III standing and that a right of
publicity violation was sufficiently pled; nor was Spokeo immune under §230;
nor was there a dormant Commerce Clause problem or a First Amendment violation
in holding Spokeo liable on plaintiffs’ theory.
Spokeo advertises by
displaying “teaser profiles” of individuals that can include “names; ages;
current and past cities of residence; partially redacted addresses, emails, and
phone numbers; and other personal information” and sometimes photographs. The
“teaser” then states that Spokeo “possesses additional information” including “
‘Criminal Records’; ‘Sex Offenses’; ‘DUIs’; ‘details about birth, marriage, and
divorce’; ‘Relationship Status’; ‘Location History’; ‘Estimated Salary’;
‘Family Members’; and redacted ‘Full Address[es]’; ‘Email Address[es],’ and
‘Phone Number[s].’ ” Plaintiffs claim never to have consented to this use of
their data, however Spokeo got it. “If a user wishes to sign up for a paid membership, the webpages that
they use to do so likewise include [the teaser’s] name and information.”
Here’s how an ad
looks, with blurring as in the original:
Article III
standing: Spokeo argued that plaintiffs’ alleged injuries didn’t qualify. The
injuries: (1) misappropriation of their intellectual property (in the form of
likenesses, names, and other information); (2) that Spokeo unjustly profited
from their likenesses; (3) denial of the right to control commercial use of
their identifies; and (4) mental and emotional injury.
In determining
whether an injury under causes of action like these is sufficiently “concrete”
to confer Article III standing, the Supreme Court has instructed that “courts
should assess whether the alleged injury to the plaintiff has a ‘close
relationship’ to a harm ‘traditionally’ recognized as providing a basis for a
lawsuit in American courts.” Harms traditionally recognized as cognizable include
“reputational harms, disclosure of private information, and intrusion upon
seclusion.” And courts can respect a legislature’s declaration that an injury
is legally redressable, though a legislature cannot “us[e] its lawmaking power
to transform something that is not remotely harmful into something that is.”
Under California
law, the right of privacy protects against injury to the feelings/peace of mind,
and Indiana and Ohio courts have indicated that their statutory rights also
stem from the common-law right of privacy. This “disclosure of private
information” is a traditionally recognized type of intangible harm, and “encompasses
the individual’s control of information concerning his or her person.” These
harms are sufficiently concrete for judicial redress. Misappropriation of
name/likeness and unjust enrichment are also “harm recognized at common law.”
[Well, they don’t require harm to the plaintiff; they’re about benefit
to the defendant—but before TransUnion, courts were happy to conflate
the two; I’m not convinced they can do so now if—and it’s a big if—TransUnion
means what it says about harm.] Infringement on their right to control
commercial use of their names and identities is also a harm recognized at
common law, as is the emotional and mental harm allegedly caused by Spokeo’s
actions. The court noted that “the claim here is that individuals’ names and
information appear alongside implications that they committed crimes and other
negative information, so the allegations of mental anguish are plausible.” Even
if the plaintiffs’ identities had no commercial value, “the injury for Article
III purposes [with respect to the commercial value ROP theory] is simply loss
of commercial use.” [Again, that’s benefit to defendant, not harm to plaintiff
in the Court’s new baseline.]
Ohio ROP: Exempts “use
of an aspect of an individual’s persona in connection with any news, public
affairs, sports broadcast, or account.” “Persona” is defined as “an
individual’s name, voice, signature, photograph, image, likeness, or
distinctive appearance, if any of these aspects have commercial value.”
Did the Ohio
plaintiff’s persona have commercial value? Yes. Under Ohio law, “[c]ommercial
value may be established by proof of (1) the distinctiveness of the identity
and by (2) the degree of recognition of the person among those receiving the
publicity.” The plaintiff pled commercial value, first, by pleading that
individuals can use Spokeo’s service to find specific names; if they type his
name, his “teaser” is one result. Thus, he pled that the pertinent audience
would sufficiently recognize his distinct identity. “Second, because Spokeo
uses Newell’s persona for commercial gain—that is, to incentivize people to
subscribe—it reasonably implies that his persona does have at least some
commercial value.”
The news/public
affars exception didn’t apply, because Spokeo’s use of his persona was not
connected to news or public affairs and had no “newsworthy value.” Use of his
name in teasers was solely for “promotion, advertising, or marketing a
product,” not for informing the public about a matter of genuine public
interest. Likewise, Spokeo had a commercial purpose: to sell its services.
Indiana: Different
language, same results.
California: Yep;
whether there could be a nationwide California class could be addressed later.
Spokeo argued that
its use was “incidental” because there was nothing special about these users;
they were just randomly plucked when someone searched for a name. Courts have
assessed “(1) whether the use has a unique quality or value that would result
in commercial profit to the defendant; (2) whether the use contributes
something of significance; (3) the relationship between the reference to the
plaintiff and the purpose and subject of the work; and (4) the duration,
prominence or repetition of the name or likeness relative to the rest of the
publication.” It was at least plausible that the use wasn’t incidental at this
stage, especially since “an implication of endorsement is not the only alleged
violation that is actionable under the relevant statutes; appropriation for
commercial use more broadly can be too.”
Plaintiffs also had
statutory standing under the UCL because they alleged that they lost money or
property by alleging that Spokeo was unjustly enriched and that they weren’t
compensated for use of their likenesses.
And they
sufficiently alleged “unfairness” under the UCL, because Spokeo takes names,
likenesses, and information that consumers never consented to give to Spokeo
and publicly displays it next to potentially inaccurate statements about
“felonies,” “arrests,” and other behavior. The plaintiffs’ claims,
consequently, are “tethered to [the] legislatively declared policy” of allowing
people to control uses their names and likenesses for commercial gain, “especially
if it casts them in an unjustifiably bad light.”
The CCPA didn’t
immunize Spokeo just because it exempted the use of publicly available data
from its own coverage.
Bucking a trend, the
court also rejected Spokeo’s argument that plaintiffs couldn’t seek UCL equitable
remedies and legal remedies at the same time.
§230 didn’t protect
Spokeo because “this grant of immunity applies only if the interactive computer
service provider is not also an ‘information content provider,’ which is
defined as someone who is ‘responsible, in whole or in part, for the creation
or development of’ the offending content.” “Spokeo is not alleged to merely host
user-generated content, it is alleged to actively take content from other
sources, curate it, and upload it to its site in a novel configuration for repurposed
uses. That makes it at least ‘in part’ responsible for the ‘creation and
development’ of this material. Indeed, the allegations are that there are no
users of Spokeo who generate content at all.”
Dormant Commerce
Clause: There was no argument that the relevant laws privilege in-state
commerce or discriminate against out-of-state commerce. Thus, they’d “be upheld
unless the burden imposed on [interstate] commerce is clearly excessive in
relation to the putative local benefits.” Spokeo didn’t show that. Having to
follow different states’ laws about what it can and cannot show to users was an
incidental burden “similar to countless similar burdens on any company
operating in multiple states.”
First Amendment: The
speech at issue was commercial. The teasers were ads referencing a specific
product, and Spokeo had an economic motivation for publishing them; they were
also not matters of public interest or newsworthy.
Thus, Central
Hudson applied. Initially, plaintiffs “make a strong case that the teasers
are likely to deceive” by putting individuals’ names next to large lettering
indicating that they “may” have felonies, arrests, and similar records even
when that is not true. This was clearly done for commercial benefit. “And it
seems likely that reasonable people may be deceived into believing that
individuals have committed bad or criminal acts when they have not.” [Would a court in an ordinary false advertising case be so willing to
find potential deception? One benefit of the traditional common law torts for plaintiffs is that they lack the empiricist framework of the modern Lanham Act and its search for likely deception through surveys.]
Even if the teasers weren’t misleading, the First Amendment didn’t bar the claims because the protection of privacy interests was important, and the laws at issue directly advanced this interest through reasonably well-tailored means. Those laws have “broad exemptions for matters that are newsworthy, of public interest, or matters of public affairs—that is, the core First Amendment purposes. And, indeed, the Supreme Court has expressly held that imposing liability for violating the traditional publicity right does not necessarily offend the First Amendment. Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broad. Co., 433 U.S. 562, 575–77 (1977).” [Pause to note that Zacchini, involving the appropriation of a performer’s entire act in a way that mimicked common-law copyright, is not the same as a modern ROP claim like this one, but ok.]
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