Friday, November 18, 2016

Peter Jaszi lecture, Confessions of a recovering auteurist

This was a lecture given in honor of Prof. Jaszi's retirement from teaching, before a festschrift for his work.

New Librarian of Congress said that she’d have the CO serve the interests of authors—assumption that authors are ©’s beneficiaries.  Metaphor of authorship/idea that authors’ interests are at the heart of © protection: familiar discourse; can overwhelm more nuanced discussions of © policy. One strong trope: The inspired geniuses of cultural production often turn out to be really poor businesspeople: easily led astray, don’t bother about money; too busy/distracted by the demands of art itself to look after themselves and their poor, destitute families.  Specialness, high degree of entitlement plus intense vulnerability: recipe for some kind of protective legal entitlement.

The problem is that often the real circumstances don’t measure up to the archetype, though occasionally they do.  VC Andrews: passed away having founded an extremely popular literary genre; left no manuscripts, but representatives of estate surreptitiously hired a ghostwriter to continue the tradition. IRS tried to get them to pay a lot of money, resulting in a great tax case. This is authorship as it is lived, rather than the romantic vision.

Connections between authorship and public interest in IP.  Authorship rhetoric is persistent and ubiquitious.  Exchange of conceptual DNA: celebration of author-genius that was so profound in literary culture jumped over to © and took hold; dead in literary world but lives on in ©.  Inspired authorship as a way to explain, for example, the history of American cinema: bodies of work that bore the individual stamp of an author.  Epic v. Killian Shows: auteur theory in court; D accused of infringing rights in DW Griffith’s Birth of a Nation. Our client had only one viable defense, that the renewal in this case hadn’t been validly filed. There was a renewal, but in somebody else’s name.  We had to show that Griffith was the author and thus the only one with the right to renew.  Our job was literally to take the premises of cinematic auteur theory and translate them into legal theory.  WFH doctrine under 1909 Act: © belonged to whoever was in control, and if Griffith was in control there was no one else who had a right to renew.

Won that case, but had an experience that caused him to doubt: Killian—relationship b/t derivative work and source following renewal of © in derivative work.  SCt in Stewart v. Abend rejected the theory that one work was as good as the other: the derivative work had as much right to exist as the source work; they should enjoy autonomous and independent lives.  Eventually we were taught that the derivative work was a secondary contribution, subservient to and legally subject to the higher claims of the author of the original work.  Began to see concept of authorship as containing ideas of hierarchy: earlier have greater claims than later; closer to source material = better claims than those who worked primarily on secondary cultural materials.  Became worrying to him.  Led him to reader response theory, destablizizing supremacy of author.

If they mention authorship in policy discussions, reach for your wallet—and count your fingers. Element of flimflam, sometimes very pronounced, along with sincere/profound influence on discourse.  The idea that © was supposed to provide revenue for author, children, and grandchildren, so life extension justified increased term. This is actuarial nonsense, but also historically just wrong.  No discussion of it in Berne etc.; just inserted by WIPO guide to Berne Convention in 1976.  That’s the first assertion of the claim that life + 50 was supposed to be for two generations.  Because it “fits” our general naïve belief in the idea of authorial entitlement and vulnerability, it went over. 

We all contribute to the grip of authorial genius, not just maximalists but minimalists.  When we, the latter, make arguments for limits we tend to go back to constitutionalism: © was supposed to encourage authors.  We implicitly validate the authorship construct: something about what a special class of people does is particularly important.  We can argue about implications of that special importance—great deal of protection or only a little encouragement, but we concede the proposition.  Yet: Copyright doesn’t always take authorship seriously.  When you actually look at doctrine, issues like the unprotectability of authors’ style, a truism of ©, or how issues of collaboration are handled in ©, you immediately see a misfit.  Lack of clear connection b/t conclusions to which a sincere and thoroughgoing conviction of importance of authorship would lead v. the conclusions we have actually arrived at. 

Manichean conflict b/t irreconcilable ideological visions: (1) elevates creative process and unique invididuals responsible for it and (2) asserts the paramount value of public access, openness, etc.

Real life “authors” have strong fairness claims.  Not metaphorical authors, but Wordsworth and Coleridge but people who labor from day to day to make creative work to sell: something more real/acute than is comfortable for theorists to acknowledge.  1994: strong congressional push to repeal §412 on requiring timely registration for eligibility for statutory damages/fees; professional commission w/lots of industry & academic representation deadlocked and its failure to endorse probably contributed to the proposal’s demise.  We have enough incentives to registration to provide the basis for a comprehensive if not complete record of American creativity—and that was Jaszi’s argument: though eliminating §412 might benefit small authors taken by surprise by the fact that their earlier failure to act might subsequently bar them from collecting reasonable compensation for infringement in later years, the interests of the system, especially in having a database for business and research purposes, justified turning away from those interests.  He is proud of preserving §412, but also has some regret that it wasn’t possible to accommodate the real interests of individual creators who are sometimes taken by surprise by the persistence of this last real formality for US works.  Even though the critique of authorship has made it easy, comfortable, and respectable to take a hard line in some copyright policy situation, to reject the trend towards mystification in favor of policy giving more weight to collective interest of public at large, there is a real costs.

We have a related proposal now for a small claims court.  Once again, finds self in position of wondering whether the benefit is worth the cost. Cost here: expedited processing may be inimical to flourishing and continued growth of the idea of user rights, especially fair use. 


Authorship isn’t the same as cultural production, but both are more widely distributed than ever.  Mystifying concept of authorship v. cultural production as more inclusive, descriptive, and even useful category.  Creators’ real problems often don’t have to do with piracy—usually business issues like getting better contracts, even better deals from landlords. Don’t fetishize IP as the heart of their concerns.  Indonesia: talked to a lot of practitioners of traditional arts—puppeteers, carvers, singers, etc.  They wanted space to show off art; they identified problems w/schooling in the arts & failure to teach about difference b/t traditional and Western music; younger people were too enamored of Western culture to do the slow, difficult work of learning the old forms. Somewhere at the very bottom of that list, a few people said that they might benefit from IP even though they weren’t sure it had meaning for them or what it is.  These were struggling custodians of great and important traditions; they had far more urgent things to think about.  Remixers, fanfic writers, vidders, are important cultural contributors but they don’t recognize themselves in the romantic genius conception.  Perhaps it’s time to focus more on the needs of systems of cultural production and less on the requirements of authorship as classically understood.  There are many ways to talk about ©; shouldn’t just fall back on author-talk as a way of avoiding what’s at stake.  Interests of users, w/recognition that users are also makers, participants in systems of cultural production, even if not all are people who would be recognized or want to be recognized under rubric of authorship w/a capital A.  Authorship, real authorship, is not the gift of the few but the fate of the many.  Cultural participation and citizenship are linked; meaningful work may become ever more scarce, and the question is whether we can grasp the options/alternatives offered to us all as culture-makers by new creative tools provided by tech.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Unclear on the concept? publisher boilerplate + CC license

I can read these sentences in a way that makes them consistent ... but not easily.

Reading list: Free Innovation by Eric von Hippel

E von Hippel, 2017. Free Innovation. Cambridge MA: MIT Press

Abstract:     
In this book I integrate new theory and new research findings into the framework of a “free innovation paradigm.” Free innovation involves innovations developed and given away by consumers as a “free good,” with resulting improvements in social welfare. I explain that free innovation is an inherently simple, transaction-free, grassroots innovation process engaged in by tens of millions of people in the household sector of national economies. Unlike producer innovation, free innovation does not require intellectual property rights to function. Indeed, from the perspective of participants, free innovation is fundamentally not about money – it is about human flourishing.


I spell out the economics of free innovation relative to producer innovation, and its major economic impacts. These are currently not measured and so hidden from view. I also develop and explore major implications of free innovation for innovation theory, policymaking, and practice.

Tamicus: IP profs' amicus brief in Lee v. Tam with Christine Farley

Hot off the presses.  Read it here.  Thanks to all who commented and signed on.

Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Announcing my upcoming move to Harvard

Beginning next academic year, I will be joining the faculty of Harvard Law as the inaugural Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law. I'll miss the wonderful students, staff and faculty of Georgetown, but I'm incredibly excited for this new set of opportunities.

Monday, November 14, 2016

Notre Dame Law Review Symposium, Panel Three

Moderated by Shubham Mukherjee

Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford Law, “Territoriality in the Protection and Enforcement of Trademark Rights”

As trade becomes more geog. expansive, so too do TM rights need to expand. Not new: goes back to 1883 Paris Convention.  Madrid Convention starting in 1890s, updated for 20th/21st century.  End point of that process is unitary TM rights. Beginnings are in Benelux in 1960s; EU has unitary rights—28, soon to be 27, countries—for 20 years. That’s a model for 6/7 other groupings in the world that are thinking of replicating, e.g., in Africa, ASEAN.

Nationwide federal registration in US was unitary right in 50 states. What’s interesting is ways in which the parallel doesn’t work, which suggests problems w/EU approach.  EU: CTM: you can now get a single TM w/single application through Alicante in Spain; don’t need intent to use.  Pure registration system. Under one reading, you only need to use the mark w/in 5 years in one country and you get to keep the whole 500 million people; can get EU wide relief by one lawsuit, instead of having to sue country by country.  It’s a lot cheaper, and generous on rules for registrability v. British IPO. 

Idea: facilitate trade at regional level by avoiding problems of overlapping rights.  We have diverse and unintegrated market in social, cultural, linguistic terms compared to legal. Result: we might increase conflicts and clearance costs.  How best to right-size TM rights? 

Project engages w/2 debates: relationship b/t registration and use, b/c this problem is most acute when the registration’s scope doesn’t come close to the actual scope.  Also, problem of clutter on the register, which motivated 2012 reform effort.  UKIPO is particularly concerned about this.  Beebe & Fromer study question premise of infinite supply of word marks.  PTO reform about increased evidence of use is evidence of concern for this issue too.

Clutter is sometimes about number of marks; Madrid Protocol has contributed.  But clutter is also a function of size of footprint granted. This includes geographic scope.  EU TM (no longer called CTM) occupies a very large space b/c a single EUTM blocks national rights in all 28 countries. Tremendous amount of dead space created.

Normative policy issues raised by current issues: What is the nature of the EU project?  Fraught issue right now, but we have a political project: is Europe a single market, or a collection of markets?  How far can politically defined territories get ahead of social and commercial patterns of change w/o provoking judicial resistance? There has in fact been great resistance to idea of single market, esp. by British judges. If we really want unitary rights, there has to be more attention to the state/federal relationship. Benelux abolished national registration when they adopted a unitary system; US got closer to abolishing despite claims to recognize state rights; EU hasn’t.  EU created CTM courts, but they aren’t actually federal courts; they’re national courts wearing a CTM hat. Commandeered by federal system, and that changes how they think about EUTMs. 

Cases: The rule is you have to make use w/in 5 years or it’s potentially subject to revocation. W/in national system, use has to be w/in country. For CTM, has to be w/in EU.  What does that mean?  Is use in Britain still use in the EU?  That would be useful for TM owners; takes pressure off of expansion.  Court of Justice answer (typical): it depends.  May be sufficient, but not necessarily. Large countries assumed that if it was used in their territory, it was sufficient.  Rule 2: DHL case, 2011: French and European offices had issued a registration for WebShipping for guess what.  Where should relief be granted?  Court has int’l jurisdiction, so relief should be available through the EU. Two exceptions: when claimant didn’t seek relief outside the area; where there is no adverse effect by the challenged use on the function of the mark outside an area, for example where linguistic differences would prevent confusion. 

In last year, Sofa Works v. Sofaworkshop, involved British pushback.  Reasoning: use in Britain justifies inference of likely expansion through Britain. But that doesn’t justify an inference of likely expansion to Spain.  There are lots of products that simply won’t sell in Spain, e.g. British food.  Therefore, use in UK will not maintain CTM. However, there was confusion in Britain, and relief was granted for passing off.  Heavily criticized by TM offices, but it is beginning to ask the right questions about whether it makes sense to extend a mark to 500 million people and 23 languages when use is limited.  Another case: green e for car rental, confusing logos. Court grants relief only in the UK.  Claimant hadn’t provided evidence of confusion through EU, which would be really expensive to litigate.

Another example: names that are confusing to Germans, but not confusing because of semantic differences to English speakers.  Relief could be limited to Germans, but burden is on defendant to show that.  He thinks that’s the right burden approach, and the right question.

If purpose is to expand trade, we should recognize that TM is as much about social and commercial boundaries as it is about political boundaries. You play w/existing doctrine aggressively to test the premises.  Maybe consider Max Planck proposal to adopt something like concurrent use (after a sufficient period of nonexpansion by registrant). Unitary rights become less sensible, ironically, the larger the union gets. Be more conscious about diversity in 28 countries than 6.  If we do embrace unitary right, then you have to really think about institutional design, b/c it’s very hard for German judges or British judges to really think of themselves as the generic “European consumer,” esp. if they’re not in a European court with judges from other countries.  Would need more empirical evidence, contra recent British rejection of surveys.

Timothy R. Holbrook, Emory University School of Law, “Boundaries, Territoriality, and Patent Infringement Remedies”

Will the court demand clear statement of extraterritorial enforceability?  Age of digital products makes it more important.  ITC lacks jurisdiction to regulate transmission of digital files across borders. But in other cases, extraterritoriality occurs: use of a system, part of which is outside the US, can infringe so long as the control is in the US. You can infringe by offering to sell where the sale is contemplated to take place in the US, even if the sale doesn’t occur and the offer occurs in Norway. Overseas acts of inducement count if the acts of infringement are domestic.  Intent to assemble components overseas can lead to liability. So there’s a lot of inconsistency in Fed. Cir. jurisprudence. One area where they finally decide to draw the line, in the wrong place, is damages: you can’t get damages from foreign sales even if there is a predicate act of infringement in the US.  Idea is that patent damages are compensatory and patent rights are territorial.  Even if the infringement is the foreseeable but-for cause of the harm, Fed. Cir. has drawn the line at territoriality.  Courts say they don’t care about conflicts of laws, but the cases’ reasoning involve consideration of conflicts.

Mark A. Lemley, Stanford Law School, “Did eBay Irreparably Injure Trademark Law”

Four-factor test from eBay: whether and how it extends outside patent law.  Short answer: whether or not it should, it’s going to, as 2nd and 9th have done w/© law; 3 circuits have applied to TM; and if you read the TM statute it looks an awful lot like the patent statute: may grant injunctions in accordance w/ principles of equity. 

How do we apply eBay to TM cases?  Wants to suggest that policies of TM law are and should be pretty different from patent law, and that means we ought to be significantly more willing to grant injunctions even applying eBay, and that has actually occurred in the cases applying eBay to TM.

Four problems w/current application to TM: (1) eBay is intended as a flexible, case-specific test; no bright-line rules but balancing.  That said, 9th Circuit has said these are rules. You must show the presence of all four factors: irreparable harm, lack of remedy at law, balance of equities, public interest.  Second, we’ve made it really hard to prove irreparable injury. How would you prove injury?  My consumers were confused, maybe: they thought they were buying my product, but they were buying my competitor’s product and they were unhappy and they blamed me. There are problems w/that—it’s inherently hard to demonstrate actual confusion.  They might not know they’re confused if they don’t have anything to complain about.  [But can’t you show lost sales or lost reputation in those scenarios? And are competitors really the standard example:]  9th Circuit says that allowing confusion to substitute for harm would eliminate the irreparable injury requirement b/c likely success on the merits would then demonstrate irreparable injury. But if we take away evidence of consumer confusion, we’re tying at least one hand behind our back.  9th Circuit is also skeptical of reputational harm.  You can’t simply demonstrate that loss of control is irreparable injury; you need reputational harm evidence.  [Or at least evidence that the D’s product is bad—as I read the cases, that’s all the courts in the 9th Circuit are asking for.]  This is troubling esp. in combination with the gatekeeper inquiry.  

Many people have suggested we should presume irreparable injury; has some sympathy for that but we might not go that far. At a minimum,  need to be more flexible about what evidence can demonstrate actual injury.

Third, adequate remedy at law: in patent, copyright we have robust damages regimes. If you win your case, you will get money.  Even if there is no injury from patent infringement, b/c statute provides floor of reasonable royalty; so too in © w/statutory damages.  TM is very different. Normally doesn’t award damages as a result of TM infringement; traditional remedy was an injunction. Damages tend to be involved only when sales diversion has been shown, or when I can show that D is a willful infringer. In some circuits, this may be changing as a result of accident of 1999 statutory change about dilution, but still in the majority of circuits you won’t get damages most of the time you win your TM suit. Combined with difficulty of getting an injunction, we come to surprising conclusion that I can win my TM suit, show confusion, and win neither damages nor an injunction. Seems like a bad idea as a matter of law/equity and not consistent w/idea of existence of adequate remedy at law.

Final problem: the public interest: plays a pretty small role in most patent and © cases. There are occasional cases in which court sees a bad idea to grant an injunction, e.g. when the patentee owns a patent on sewage treatment and wants the city of Milwaukee to shut down the sewage treatment plant.  That’s not a good idea.  But mostly it’s between D and P. In TM law, if you won it’s b/c you showed that consumers were confused; a court that denies an injunction is saying that the consumers can continue in their confusion.  [This is why I’m ok with the rule that Lemley is not: much of the time, these conclusions are wrong/don’t matter to consumers.]

Return to pre-eBay is unlikely, and there are some benefits from its application. Case by case inquiry can help us look at difference b/t strong claim of infringement—counterfeit or knockoff—and more extreme extensions where the theory is that a completely unrelated product confuses consumers about some relationship with no bearing on a purchasing decision.  eBay can serve a positive role—weeding out unnecessary cases by weeding out the remedies. But to do so we’ve got to apply it in a flexible, case by case way, with a recognition that there is injury to P and to public in the core TM case.

Moderated by Shubham Mukherjee, Whirpool Corporation

Dinwoodie: both other papers ask whether there ought to be transcendental principles across borders or across types of IP. If courts are looking at extraterritoriality in patent in a more horizontal way, maybe the © cases can provide some guidance. Q what courts are really doing in eBay cases.

Lemley: not really clear b/c many courts don’t talk about eBay. Maybe b/c haven’t thought about it, or maybe b/c they think it’s so easy to satisfy they don’t discuss it.  When they talk about it, a minority grant injunctions.

Dinwoodie: TRIPS bars compulsory licensing in TMs.  If denying injunction = judicially created compulsory licensing, that might create an issue.

Lemley: no remedy isn’t the same as compulsory licensing (or is it?).  Dinwoodie is focused on geog. expansion. Wished you’d do more w/product expansion, which is equally important for clutter costs.   But is anything plausible in a world where so much is online?  I’m not directing my product to Spain, but everyone in Spain can see it, and it will be seen alongside the Spanish competitor and everyone else.

Dinwoodie: people have talked about the product scope extension more than geog, but it’s an important part of clutter, particularly in Europe b/c we don’t interrogate goods in the specification. In Europe, the list of goods/services is 50% larger for the same mark in Europe v. USPTO.  Internet: in theory, that’s important, but courts have become more restrained about the extent to which they’ve said that internet use is use everywhere. Both in EU and US.

Lemley: thinking about what we tie our royalty calculation to, and how that relates to our theory of harm or benefit. If making, using, selling, offering to sell is infringing, then maybe anything can trigger damages. But maybe the benefit someone gets is where they use it, not the fact that the salesperson happens to be sitting in the US to make a foreign sale for a use in a foreign country.  We’ve talked about the idea of a locus of infringement, where the harm is centered; a locus of injury or locus of benefit might help.

Holbrook: agreed.

Lemley: Dilution statute expressly says no damages unless willfulness; hard to say there’s an adequate remedy at law without damages; problems of proof in dilution are even harder than problems of proof in TM, b/c whole concept of blurring involves not being injured by one instance.  This combines to suggest that even if you do what I suggest re: eBay, we might be granting injunctions in fewer dilution cases, but not none—the consumer interest is nonexistent.  But no adequate remedy at law—he’d think courts would rebel against that, though 9th Circuit hasn’t.

McKenna: thinking about why the 9th Circuit decided to do this—there was a pretty significant time gap b/t eBay and the adoption in TM. Something about the brokenness of infringement doctrine—courts are increasingly skeptical there’s any harm; courts let the skepticism arise at the remedies stage. Hard to figure out how you talk about this without any recognition of the substantive standard. Herb Reed itself is a weird case where there might not be TM harm.

Lemley: Yeah, we might not love the finding of infringement in Herb Reed or San Miguel, but doesn’t think it’s considered decisionmaking but rather accident. Herb Reed is a preliminary injunction case.  They then in dictum say we should apply eBay b/c we require irreparable harm in © case and in permanent injunction TM cases; neither of the cited cases say what they say it says.

McKenna: if all the cases citing eBay are cases w/reservations about harm in general, that could be the driver.

Lemley: not citing eBay is more likely to be counterfeit, bad lawyer, default rather than choice of cases by judge.

Arti Rai: The Court is taking cases to make transubstantive law from the patent context where there hasn’t been percolation. Maybe disproportionate number of patent extraterritoriality cases creates impoverishment for the record—the district courts don’t have the opportunity to create as rich a record. 


Holbrook: good point.

Notre Dame Law Review Symposium, Keynote Address – Honorable David W. McKeague, Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals

Dissenter in Varsity Brands.  Case touches on boundary issues that are our subject. Perspective of a judge.  Apparel industry is huge; could also affect robotics, 3D printing, digital video.  We don’t know what they might do/how broad the scope of the case will be.  Five graphic designs in which VB registered a ©.  Printed out the design on fabric, then cut and sewed.

The designs are very much cheerleading uniforms: you don’t need specific information about them to recognize that.  Mazer v. Stein: can’t use sculpture w/o fear of © liability for lamp if sculpture is capable of separate/independent existence.

Here, the stripes are graphic and the question is whether you can prevent someone from using a uniform with those designs on them.  What is the intrinsic utilitarian function of a cheerleader outfit?  Should we include or exclude the information conveyed by the outfit as part of its utilitarian function?  Some commentators even question the order of the questions we should ask.  At least nine different tests for functionality, almost all of which are outcome-determinative.  These various attempts differ substantially—twisting themselves into knots.  Basic question: can the utilitarian be separated from the aesthetic?

Copyright cases are rare in fed cts. You have to educate us; don’t assume that we know the rules.  Dct said that the stripes made the garment recognizable as a cheerleading uniform; merged with the function.

Lots of cases.  Belt buckle: separable.  Mannequin face with a “hungry” look: separable, though earlier mannequins not.  Prom dress sequins, crystals, ruched satin, tulle netting: not conceptually separable from prom dress itself.  If you can find a pattern, you’re ahead of us. The majority in the court of appeals for Varsity Brands came up with a 10th test.  Combination of objectively necessary/design process tests.  Reversed district court & found separability.

Majority opinion is thoughtful & scholarly, but not practical.  Majority defined the function of a cheerleading uniform broadly: to cover the body, wick away moisture, withstand the vigor of athletic movements.  He thinks there are other functions in which the decorative design merges with the actual functional design and shouldn’t be protectable by copyright. Purpose or function of clothing is not merely to look good, but to look good on the wearer and to make the wearer look better.   “Does this make me look fat?” is a question about function.

J. Breyer seemed responsive: he said, the clothes on the hanger do nothing, and the clothes on the woman do everything; that’s what fashion is about.  J. Kagan said: that’s so romantic. 

Majority said that identifying function wasn’t important, but it seems to him that informational/identifying function can be considered once we agree that the article is a utilitarian one.  Star put more emphasis on the appearance of the wearer created by the design than on the identification function.  Majority also rejected argument that design was inextricably intertwined with the utility.  They thought that would render nearly all artwork unprotectable. He thinks that went too far. Under his argument, only artwork integral to the functions of the uniform/other article would be unprotectable.  He didn’t need to frame a test, since he was in the dissent; pragmatic approach of the district court.

Separability isn’t just physical. You can attach a design element in a way that makes it physically separable, but oftentimes separation would destroy the useful article; that doesn’t mean there’s no separability for © purposes; just may be conceptual separability.  Still have fundamental Q: how do we determine if something is clearly recognizable as a separate graphic work. If © can prevent manufacture of clothing, there’d be millions of © on clothing, thousands of lawsuits in fashion industry.  We don’t see that; before Varsity, nobody really thought that something like this would be protectable.

We don’t know how many © there are in garments, b/c of the way the CO categorizes: by type, as selected by registrant. Varsity said “visual materials or 2D artwork.” 

Boundary problems: most of the fashion industry relies on TM to protect logos etc., not © to begin with. There is an increase in © lawsuits, but mostly fabric design. Varsity started to argue that this was a fabric design case. 

His dissent, identifying the doctrinal confusion as a “mess,” was in part a signal to the Court that this was certworthy, given the confusion in the  lower courts. Reached mainstream press, blogs, ultimately clerks and Justices; thinks that happened in this particular case.

Notable in the oral argument: no reference to any of the existing tests in the lower courts, though there was reference to tests in the amicus brief submitted by Lemley, McKenna, Sprigman, Tushnet, Samuelson et al.  They will formulate a test to achieve the result they are interested in w/r/t fashion industry in general.  There were at least 15 disputes b/t the amicus briefs despite the limited QP; only one of these disputes came up in the oral argument, so there’s a lot left to fight about no matter what.  E.g., Star sought cert on the amount of deference owed to the CO’s determination of copyrightability under Chevron/Skidmore.  6th Circuit said, correctly, no Chevron deference, but majority granted Skidmore deference, which was much more problematic—the fact they granted an application shouldn’t be entitled to that deference, he thinks, even if their interpretation of the statute should be.

Difference in court of appeals: appeal is as of right; we don’t control the lawyers’ arguments, and sometimes they are ill-advised and we are interested in something different.  SCt has more control.  He thought interesting line of questions dealt with in Buccafusco/Fromer amicus: camouflage as functional design applied to clothing.  Fashion Law Institute argued that camo can be wholly aesthetic—a military-inspired fashion statement.  [I used to wear cassette tapes as earrings—hey, it was the 1980s—and I think that was a fashion statement but that didn’t make cassette tapes have a separable copyrightable shape.]  Justices were using camo question almost as a litmus test: if a test didn’t exclude camo in the forest, that test was probably wrong.  Justices also looked at images in various briefs.  Justices rarely turn to pages of brief to read quotes when asked to do so, but they did refer to pages with images during the argument.

What about Duchamp’s shovel attached to a wall: “Prelude to a Broken Arm”?  What about a dress with a Mondrian pattern on it?  What about old all-white cheerleader uniforms?  J. Roberts dismissed that as old-fashioned.  One argument: if you take the claimed features off, you don’t have a cheerleader uniform, but you have a little black dress. 

Jane Ginsburg’s argument: no need to define separability b/c this is just a question of applying a 2D design to an object.

Samuelson: thinks they’re going to reverse; they were caught up with the camo metaphor. Once a fabric design can be functional, then you have to look at the effects of other designs. 

Lemley: Other IP cases from the Court: tried very hard not to adopt a test, just to say that there are factors to consider in each case. Fact that there was no discussion of the existing tests in the lower courts was significant.

McKenna: many people fear this lack of clear resolution will just deepen the confusion; Court could help by picking a test, regardless of which test they picked.

Judge McKeague: I don’t want this to come back to us.


Notre Dame Law Review Symposium, Negotiating IP’s Boundaries in an Evolving World

Panel One – Moderated by Joseph D. Bauer

Mark P. McKenna, Notre Dame Law School & Lucas S. Osborn, Campbell Law School, “Trademarks and Digital Goods”

BMW sued Turbosquid for hosting digital models of BMW cars—models could be used in video games or movies. Digital models are different from tangible models.  Music used to be sold in tangible form, and isn’t much any more.  Karaoke files; software used to come on floppy discs and CDs.  3D printing takes digitization to a new level.  Print out a purse, a Star Wars lamp.  Things that implicate TM law and may lead to consumer confusion.  But about what?

Insofar as these cases involve claims about use of TM w/in digital goods or to designate them, they run headlong into DastarDastar couldn’t have been clearer: “origin” means physical origin, not creative or intangible content.  Courts have struggled with the case; among other things, figuring out what counts as “goods.”  Gensler v. Strabala: Gensler sued a former employee who advertised himself as having been the designer of 5 buildings that Gensler was the architect of record for; argued that arch. works were group collaborative efforts. 7th Cir. says this is a claim about the origin of services, and so not like Dastar: a false claim of creation of the IP, the designs—which is exactly what Dastar tried to rule out and was exactly what Fox too alleged in that case.  Cisco Tech. v. Certification Trends: Cisco created practice exams to certify people as Cisco experts; the D produced its own versions, and Cisco claimed that reuse + insertion of additional material was false designation of origin. Court thought this turned on whether D added content, and if D created a new good by adding content it would win, whereas mere repackaging/reuse of Cisco content would be actionable.  This can’t possibly be consistent w/Dastar’s rejection of “mutant copyright.”

Sleptone shows increasing challenges in digital area.  Sleptone creates karaoke tracks.  Sued restaurants for unauthorized copies.  Often claim that they made backup copies in violation of Sleptone’s policies.  Embedded in the file is the Sound Choice mark. Early on, Sleptone claimed false designation of authorship of the tracks; some courts were persuaded, in part b/c they had a hard time figuring out the goods were, and said that new copies were new goods b/c they are digital versions. Got more sophisticated over time: Sleptone argued that confusion was over origin of tangible digital file, even though that was never presented to consumers.  Seventh Circuit rejected that reasoning: intangible files are immaterial b/c consumers never interact w/them. That suggests an important doctrinal refinement: focus on tangible goods has to be layered w/Q of whether the alleged confusion relates to the tangibility of the good, rather than mere “one from column A, one from column B” approach. 

One could imagine saying that digital files are intangible, or that every file must be instantiated in memory and thus they are always tangible.  We think both approaches are too simplistic. Analysis needs to be informed by TM policy and layering approach. ID’ing tangible file is a step, but we need to ask what consumer cares about w/r/t the tangibility.  Downloading BMW model from Turbosquid, or 3D printing site: these sites say who created the file.  If it turns out to be crappy, will I blame BMW, or user 1234 or Turbosquid? That’s where source understanding applies.  [Fan fiction literature has a lot on this: understanding of origin of the particular creative work.] Doesn’t exclude digital goods altogether.  If the website looks official/officially endorsed, that could be a problem.

Role of TM law in digital world: traditional orientation was physical goods, not new to Dastar.  Not to say that TM never covers a broader view, and over time TM has figured out how to assimilate service marks, assignment and licensing.  Consumers might sometimes get valuable info about origin of intangibles, but one lesson of attempts to adapt is that when TM law has done so, it’s had real difficulty drawing lines distinguishing itself from utility patent, design patent, and ©.  Application to digital goods brings all those concerns to the fore.  TM theory: Info about the source of goods, primarily so consumers can set expectations about physical quality of goods—incentive to offer goods of consistent quality. Especially important for goods w/unobservable characteristics. That presumes that mark owner produces or stands behind production of instantiation, but digital tech could radically separate design and production.  [I’m reminded of Real Genius: would you call that a design flaw, or an implementation flaw?]

There’s a decent argument that TM doesn’t have much to say about 3D printing, if producers are now just designers w/little or no involvement in tangible production.  Not clear consumer expectations about quality of physical goods have much connection to quality of intangible content. At least that’s the Q TM should be asking. In some cases consumers might value content, and might care who created it very much; puts pressure on right of attribution. But interest in knowing who created the design isn’t the same as interest in who created the particular copy, and that matters if we want to maintain a distinction b/t TM and ©/design patent; those are the regimes charged w/dealing w/content itself, rather than source designation of content.

Perry Saidman, Saidman Design Law Group, “Design Patent Functionality”

The line b/t design & utility patent: thesis is that there should be no line.  Functionality comes into validity and infringement contexts of design patent. The statute says a design must be ornamental.  Courts used to focus on defining ornamental: Learned Hand said we must find at least a rudimentary aesthetic appeal.  Like low bar for originality in ©.  Functionality got to be the opposite side of ornamental coin, perhaps b/c they were both in the patent statute. 

Functional is either “de facto functional”—performs a function—or “de jure functional”—functional legally and not capable of being protection.  He suggests “utilitarian” for “de jure functional,” b/c now courts are constantly confusing them. 

Current rule: design patent on utilitarian features is a danger against which we should protect.  High Point Design (Fed. Cir. 2013): trial court said all major characteristics of fuzzy slipper were functional.  Fed. Cir. said that serving function was a prerequisite for design patent: design has to be for an article of manufacture, and articles of manufacture have functions. So de facto functionality/feature was required. Functionality of article isn’t the same as de jure functionality of its design.  He posits: consider underlying purpose of functionality doctrine, to prevent monopolization of utilitarian features that can only be monopolized w/utility patent.  [I think this understates the importance of defining what’s not patentable—there are useful features that are not eligible for utility patents b/c not sufficiently novel, but also that should be committed to the public domain for that reason—defines what must be free to use, not just what is appropriable.  So it’s “can only be monopolized, if at all, w/utility patent” that ought to be our standard.]

If there are alternative designs that perform substantially the same function as the patented design, the design doesn’t monopolize that function.  But then you get questions: what is the function? Claimant will define it broadly: e.g., connecting two devices.  Accused infringer: define it as making a more specific kind of connection.  Egyptian Goddess got rid of point of novelty b/c P and D would always define the point of novelty differently.  The word function is the same in his opinion.  Manipulability is limited only by the skill of the attorneys involved, rendering alternative design test meaningless.  So we should reject the idea that we need to prevent design patents from having utilitarian features. Then there’s no need for a functionality doctrine.  All utilitarian features have an associated appearance; it’s the appearance of those features, whether utilitarian or not, that matters in validity determinations, w/o need for functionality doctrine.

On infringement side, there’s been a ridiculous practice of factoring out functional features in Markman hearings, which makes no sense.  Comparing only ornamental features makes no sense.  The rationale is that you shouldn’t use design patent to protect ideas or inventions.  Design patent doesn’t protect general idea; has to look like the patented design. Richardson case involving utilitarian features, all dictated by functional purpose.  Fed. Cir. made fatal statement: DCt properly factored out functional aspects as part of claim construction. But this is wrong.  If the accused design doesn’t look like the patented design, factoring is unnecessary.  Confirmed this year in a flotation device case: functional elements of Richardson had design dictated by their functional purposes, but still had appearance aspects. Discussing Ethicon: Certain elements of a surgical device can be functional but functionality doesn’t preclude them from having a protectable appearance. Don’t entirely eliminate a structural element from the claimed design, even if de facto functional.  All claimed designs have functions, all features have appearance, and it’s the appearance that matters in validity and infringement; functionality is dead.

Pamela Samuelson, UC Berkeley School of Law, “Strategies for Discerning the Proper Boundaries of Copyright and Patent Protections”

Motivation arose in computer software, back from Whelen v. Jaslow saying that everything was protectable unless there was only one way to achieve a function.  That was the thickest scope of © ever—one idea per program. That couldn’t be right. She read the software patent cases and realized they were screwed up too.  Initial impetus: you don’t need to protect all w/© b/c patent can play a role, but she showed how incoherent the court of appeals was in software patent space.

90s cases started to recognize role for patent and for ©.  Expression v. process/functionality, but those are hard to separate. Some courts rejected © claims where they perceived attempt to get patent like protection. Fed. Cir. in Oracle v. Google endorsed complete overlap b/t patent and ©, invoking Mazer v. Stein dicta. 

Samuelson believes in categorical exclusivity. Art. 1, §1, cl. 8 distinguishes b/t authors and inventors.  Baker v. Selden says © protects explanations and depictions of useful art but not for useful art itself. Sec. 102(b) embodies this distinction b/c patentable subject matter includes processes, methods and systems and 102(b) excludes them from (c).  Mazer says utility patents and (c) are “mutually exclusive,” not same as design patent. Nimmer treatise since 1963 has said no problem w/overlapping subject matter; she thinks Nimmer is ignoring the real doctrine.  2016 version has changed its interpretation of Baker v. Selden, rejects election of protection theory but there’s something seriously misleading in the treatise about the case law.  Nimmer says there’s a case that suggests that (c) is available for the subject matter of an expired patent. That case stands for the opposite proposition: the only thing (c) protects is actually the pictorial elements.

Paper develops a more subtle approach for boundary line problems.  Layering/selection of elements theory is most common/promising, though election has a role.  Attractiveness of patent bargain/effectiveness in inducing disclosure depends almost entirely on the background of free competition; we worry about © giving longer rights w/o bother of application process, examination of the claim, etc.  We worry about people choosing © to get statutory damages or actual damages + disgorgement, and potential criminal liability (not there for patent).  Border control measures are another example of different treatment. 

Kohus: inventor used © to claim exclusive rights in an expired patent—a © registration for a baby swing.  Claimed it as a toy but sued people who made actual swings. CO should have cancelled the registration.  Conclusion: courts generally do a pretty good job managing the boundaries of © and utility patent and keeping them separate.  Arguments about what kinds of techniques courts can use: debunking Nimmer.

Rebecca L. Tushnet, Georgetown University Law Center, “Raising Walls Against Overlapping Rights: Copyright Preemption and the Right of Publicity”

Thanks for organizing/coming out.

I begin with the proposition that the right of publicity overlaps with trademark in its protections against false endorsement; with copyright in its supposed justifications in incentivizing performances; and with traditional privacy and defamation torts in protecting personal dignity and control over one’s own presentation of the self. Yet the right of publicity has been used to extend plaintiffs’ control over works and uses that don’t violate any of the rights with which it shares a justification.  This quicksilver nature is what makes the right of publicity so dangerous.

I will offer only one appalling recent example of the unchecked expansion of the right of publicity: In 2015, a district court allowed a right of publicity claim against a racing video game to proceed.   The theory of the case was that the game offered a visual representation of an actual racing track, including an image of a banner displaying the trademark of Virag, an Italian flooring company.  Virag is also the last name of Mirco Virag, one of Virag’s owners, and the court accepted the allegation that the Virag trademark was a “personification” of Mirco Virag.  As a result, although the First Amendment precluded a claim against the video game based on allegations of trademark infringement, a right of publicity claim survived based on the game’s alleged use of Mirco Virag’s identity—based on the same banner that triggered the First Amendment-barred confusion claim.   Even in such cases of flat-out conflict between trademark and the right of publicity’s respective First Amendment limits, courts have been unwilling to limit the right of publicity.

One reason for this expansion is that, without a coherent justification for the right of publicity, there are no obvious stopping points for its scope.  If the justification is merely about allowing a person control over unconsented uses of her image, then any uses or even reminders of her identity would violate the right, subject at most to the external constraint of others’ First Amendment rights to engage in speech about the world.   Following this logic, courts have generally only limited the right based either on statutory exclusions, which need no theories behind them,  or based on an often cramped view of the First Amendment.

What can be done?  My paper argues that recent copyright preemption cases have highlighted the potential for using preemption theories to create a sort of definition of the right of publicity by subtraction: where Congress has tried to achieve a particular aim, such as encouraging the production of creative works, in a particular way, then states should not be allowed to upset that balance by encouraging production in a different way.  Although better First Amendment treatment for the right of publicity still remains an important need where a speaker is creating a new depiction of a real person, preemption can define the boundaries of publicity rights where the challenged use is based on an existing copyrighted work in which the person voluntarily appeared.  In such cases, only an additional justification—such as consumer deception about false endorsement—can justify a separate right of publicity.

This purposive approach, applying limits to the right of publicity based on the extent to which it tries to further an acceptable purpose in the wrong way, can also guide us in finding proper First Amendment limits. The fact of the matter is that we have a long history of developing First Amendment limits to other torts based on the core justifications for the right of publicity—reputation has long been considered by the law of defamation, false endorsement by trademark law, and incentives by copyright law.  Even when there’s no copyright preemption, the First Amendment analysis should draw on those limits rather than treating the right of publicity as if it were a completely separate property right and thus entitled to be broader than the combination of those rights.

First Amendment, then, is an IP regime of its own.  It describes what may not be reduced to property: centrally, facts that have been made public.

This is not to advocate, as some cases have, case by case balancing. Categorical balancing can fit well with a purposive approach, once we define the right categories of speech.  I have argued that in general the appropriate category for the application of the right of publicity is in cases of misleading commercial advertising.  This may appear to some people to undervalue a celebrity’s dignity interests in avoiding commercialization, but I don’t think that interest is meaningfully different, for First Amendment purposes, than a dignity interest in avoiding being talked about, which celebrities and even ordinary folks don’t have.  I welcome your perhaps contrary views.

Samuelson: Saidman’s paper reminds her of effort on patent side to say patentable subject matter is too difficult, so there shouldn’t be limits on it.  She sees “ornamental” in the statute and she thinks it has to mean something. Maybe Congress should take ornamentality out and replace w/appearance, but doesn’t think the SCt would be as willing as the Fed. Cir. to ignore a word in the statute.

Saidman: Fed. Cir. has said it means the opposite of functionality.  Statutory subject matter: “original” has been ignored.  Ornamentality isn’t enough. Nobody has ever really dug into that. I’d like to think that ornamental is a minimum bar for aesthetic appeal; judges are very poor arbiters of what’s good looking. We’re supposed to protect articles of manufacture, so anything protectable by utility patent is also protectable by design patent.

RT: But I don’t think you even mean that: most clothing is not protectable by utility patent, but you think most clothing is protectable by design patent.  Sears/Compco: To some extent utility patent law must define not just what is protectable but what must be free for all to use.

Saidman: what’s not novel, what’s obvious, what’s in the public domain is unprotectable under either regime.  If novel and nonobvious, protectable by both utility and design patent.  [That would seem to me to suggest a vastly higher threshold for design patent than currently applied.  Or, I think, what he really means is that you’d then do the functionality analysis embedded into novelty/obviousness.]

Samuelson: Cts struggling w/1A as a limit on ROP.  Building into an adaptation of fair use: finding ways to limit, where commerciality, consent/lack of consent, etc. might be factors.  Courts would be more willing to play with that multifactor approach.

RT: Tried that, it’s a disaster.  Once you start covering noncommercial speech, courts say that realism is not transformative, but then news reports are anyway protected by the First Amendment. That’s not law in the sense of giving coherent reasons that have empirical or normative justifications.  © isn’t good at making these distinctions but that’s no reason to add another regime that isn’t.

McKenna: Saidman’s paper moves the question into scope rather than eliminating it; hides the fact that, at some point, it’s always a question of broad or narrow characterization.

Lemley: Back door utility patents as a risk.  The grant rate for design patent is over 99%; no real substantive examination in these cases. Should be worried about back door?

Saidman: no, b/c function is never protected, only appearance.  99% is exaggerated.  Comparison w/© and trade dress: design patents have a 15 year term, shorter than © and trade dress. Functionality in those regimes matters b/c of length of protection. 

Q: but functionality has to mean something for design patent. Industry standard of plug shape: can that be considered part of what’s protected?  That can’t be so.


Saidman: the particular connector in the actual case did have a unique appearance. Could show you 50 different nuts with threads inside that have to have certain diameter/distance; however, they all look different.  It’s that look that is protectable.  If everything was in broken lines except for the threads, I’d agree w/you, and it would be rejected, not b/c it’s functional but b/c it’s not novel/it’s obvious. Don’t need functionality to protect against that.

Friday, November 11, 2016

Using others' product photos to advertise same product isn't fair use

Minka Lighting, Inc. v. Bath Kitchen Decor, LLC, No. ED CV 13-02370, 2015 WL 12743863 (C.D. Cal. Feb. 13, 2015)

Minka sells ceiling fans, lighting products, and home accessories.  It exclusively uses (or tries, as the facts show) about 2000 authorized distributors, who resell to consumers.  It has registered copyrights in product photos as well as registered trademarks in various terms such as MINKA LAVERY for electric lighting fixtures. 

Defendant Krayzman began selling ceiling fans and lighting products, using a merchant account owned/operated by defendant Tropper to process credit cards.  The two formed BKD, a limited liability company, which offered numerous Minka products for sale on its website, at prices lower than the prices offered by Minka’s authorized distributors. “BKD’s website displays Plaintiff’s copyrighted photographs of its products, as well as Plaintiff’s trademarks.”

Minka demanded that BKD cease and desist using its copyrighted images and trademarks on its websites. BKD didn’t respond, but removed the images after its ISP threatened to shut the website down, though it didn’t remove the images from a related website, as the ISP for that site did not make a similar threat. Defendants then created a new company and displayed the same copyrighted images on a website for the new company, and sold Minka’s products through that site as well.

The court found copyright infringement in the product photos.  Defendants’ fair use defense failed because the use wasn’t transformative—it was for the same purpose as the original—and it was commercial.  The photos were creative but already published (at best neutral); the entire amount was used; and the commerciality of the nontransformative use justified a presumption of market harm, which defendants didn’t rebut.  The fact that using the photos might have encouraged more sales of Minka products didn’t change the effect on the market value of the photos.  (The court, unfortunately, didn’t address whether authorized distributors actually paid anything to Minka for their own uses and thus whether there was, in fact, a market value above zero.)  Thus, the court found BKD and Krayzman liable for copyright infringement.

The court rejected individual liability for Tropper.  Vicarious liability exists when a person “ ‘has the right and ability to supervise the infringing activity and also has a direct financial interest in such activities.’ ”  Tropper was involved in organizing BKD, and signed the lease for BKD’s office space. He was also heavily involved in setting up BKD’s finances. But there was no evidence that he was involved in managing BKD, and thus lacked the right and ability to supervise the infringing activity.  Tropper told Krayzman “to make sure not to sell any product in a way in which companies were telling him not to.” Also, “numerous times, [Tropper] told [Krayzman] that he should not sell below MAP” - the minimum price set by manufacturers - “or not sell the Minka products.” At his deposition, Tropper stated that as far as the Minka products were concerned, Krayzman “certainly did not listen to [him].” Although he was copied on sales order confirmation emails sent from BKD’s website, and he was copied emails regarding the placement of large orders with distributors. But he didn’t monitor the amounts debited or withheld from BKD’s accounts by lending institutions, “thus indicating a limited role in the ongoing management of the company’s financial operations.” And Krayzman did all of the marketing for BKD, including putting up the websites. As a matter of law, Tropper wasn’t vicariously liable for copyright infringement.  Nor was there evidence supporting direct liability.

Trademark claims: here things go a bit off the rails.  On nominative fair use, defendants showed that they used the marks to refer to the trademarked goods.  In the 9th Circuit, the plaintiff must then show that the use of the mark wasn’t nominative fair use.  Defendants showed that they had genuine goods to sell.  But, “[b]ecause the likelihood of confusion is often a fact-intensive inquiry, courts are generally reluctant to decide this issue at the summary judgment stage.” And there were factual issues on the second and third elements of nominative fair use.  Defendants might have used more than what was reasonably necessary; although they mostly displayed no more than the marks themselves, there was one webpage that contained the “Minka Lavery” logo alongside logos for six non-Minka companies. “While widespread use of such logos might result in a finding in Plaintiff’s favor, the Court cannot find as a matter of law that, based on this one instance, the second element of the nominative fair use test is not met.”

The third factor, whether the websites suggested sponsorship or endorsement by Minka, was “even more fact-intensive.” Minka suggested that a statement on the website that if a customer would like to expedite his or her order, s/he could call to “inquire about product lead time and availability,” and BKD “may be able to have [the product] shipped to [the customer] from the manufacturer” suggested sponsorship or endorsement.  [How? The court did not explain how the ability to order from a manufacturer indicates anything other than the ability to order from a manufacturer.]  Defendants pointed out that the presence of products from a number of manufacturers would clearly indicate that consumers weren’t buying from the manufacturer, but the court declined to resolve the factual dispute.

Making matters worse, the court treated first sale as an independent defense and held that first sale only covers the marks actually applied to the goods—not references to the goods for sale on a website: “The doctrine’s focus on goods ‘bearing a true mark’ indicates that it applies to trademarks appearing on the products themselves, as distinct from the website used to sell the products.”  So how are you supposed to tell people what you have for sale?  Can you show pictures of what you have for sale, if the mark is applied to the goods in the pictures?


Tropper, at least, wasn’t individually liable for trademark infringement, because the standard for vicarious liability is more stringent for everything but copyright.   So too with the trademark counterfeiting (!) claim, intentional interference claims, and UCL claims (where the California Court of appeal has held that vicarious liability just doesn’t exist).

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Gov't brief in Lee v. Tam

Available here.  They make the same "bumper sticker" argument that I think makes sense.

Yelp avoids liability for allegedly biased filter yet again

Albert v. Yelp, Inc., 2016 WL 3910830, No. G051607, 44 Media L. Rep. 2357 (Cal. Ct. App. July 15, 2016)

Albert, who operates a small law office, sued Yelp for various claims, and Yelp brought an anti-SLAPP motion.  Although she might have been able to amend her claim to add potentially meritorious causes of action, that can’t be done to avoid an anti-SLAPP dismissal.

After a temporary employee of Albert’s became upset because he believed Albert had missed a deadline concerning a case involving a friend of his, he allegedly enlisted a group of his friends (and possibly others) in a campaign of defamation against Albert. “The campaign allegedly included having nonclients pose as clients to write derogatory reviews about Albert’s services.” 

Albert had no choice about having a review page on Yelp, though Yelp also sells ad packages to reviewed businesses.  A Yelp VP declared under oath that “the software does not favor advertisers or punish non-advertisers.” Yelp also claimed that it used a filter to try to weed out reviews from interested parties, whether false positive reviews from employees, or false negative reviews from competitors.  These reviews are still accessible, but don’t count in the aggregate star rating.  Albert alleged that her decision not to advertise on Yelp resulted in the removal of at least one positive, five-star review from the counted reviews, and the display of multiple negative reviews.

Albert alleged that the format of a review page would feature information about the business in the upper left, under a Yelp review banner.  “The space to the immediate right is a space for photos. If no photos are posted by either the business itself or reviewers, there is merely a rectangular box with a faint outline of city buildings suggesting a sort of skyline.” Albert alleged that her page would look like this without any photos:



Photos that are posted “generally look as if they were posted by the business itself for promotional purposes.” But Albert alleged that, as part of the campaign against her, a picture was appended showing a “Gone Crazy Be Back Soon” post-it, with no indication that it came from a third party:


Albert was allegedly unable to delete the post-it note picture. Her complaint against Yelp alleged (1) defamation; (2) intentional interference with economic advantage and (3) intentional infliction of emotional distress. The trial court granted Yelp’s anti-SLAPP motion.

There was no question that Yelp had been sued for its exercise of free speech rights; but was this speech about a matter of public interest? “[C]omment on issues of public interest are integral to Albert’s claims,” given Albert’s self-presentation, and associated press publicity, as a crusader fighting foreclosures on behalf of small homeowners.  “The tenor of many of the third-party posts giving her bad reviews was that she was not living up to her image as such a champion.”  The dividing line between purely private speech and comment on issues of public interest was whether the speech merely concerns “a particular interaction between the parties” or touches on “matters of public concern that can affect many people.”  The appellate court concluded that the posts about Albert “implicate broader matters than just whether she missed a deadline in one case,” given her heavy involvement in the foreclosure fallout from the Great Recession.

The statutory exemption of commercial speech from anti-SLAPP protection applied only to a defendant’s statements trying to sell its own products or services, not to a third party’s comments about some other person’s products or services.  Thus, the court of appeals proceeded to assess whether, if the facts were as Albert claimed, Yelp could be held liable.

Defamation: §230 applied, easily.  Roommates supported Yelp, because there was no evidence that it solicited defamatory or misleading reviews. Indeed, “[i]t is easy to overlook that the Roommates court, while saying the website could be liable for its own eliciting of illegal preferences, also said that a free-form ‘Additional Comments’ section of the website was protected under section 230.” Even if Yelp’s algorithm downgraded non-paying businesses, there was no liability because Yelp didn’t create any of the bad reviews.  It’s not enough for an ISP to make it “too easy” for vindictive third parties to sully reputations, or for it to “psychologically” encourage defamatory reviews.  Affirmatively asking third parties to post defamatory content might be actionable, but there was no evidence that Yelp did that.

Intentional infliction of emotional distress: “Since Albert provided no evidence that Yelp itself authored any of the defamatory postings or that Yelp intentionally hid positive reviews, nothing it did would approach extreme conduct.”

Intentional interference with prospective economic advantage: This requires a separate wrongful act by the defendant designed to disrupt an economic relationship. Yelp’s §230 immunity for the posts precluded liability.


Other possible causes of action: “It might be true, in a vacuum, that what Yelp says about itself, and specifically its review filter, could constitute commercial speech and thus be exempt from the anti-SLAPP statute.” But the anti-SLAPP statute can’t be circumvented via belated amendments to the complaint.

Wednesday, November 09, 2016

Consumer protection fellowship opportunity

The ABA encourages 1Ls and 2Ls to apply for the Janet D. Steiger Fellowship Project. Students selected will serve eight or ten weeks during the summer of 2017 in the consumer protection or consumer affairs offices of participating state and territorial governments. 

The application period is November 10, 2016 through January 31, 2017.  Applications and full details are available online at: http://AmBar.org/Steiger. Submission of all required materials must be sent via email to: ABASteigerFellowship@americanbar.org

Each selected student will receive $6,000 stipend for the summer (administered through the offices of the state/territory attorneys general and subject to certain federal taxes). In the event that a Steiger Fellow is not living at home during their fellowship, there is a possiblity that a limited optional travel/housing stipend allowance may be available.

Please refer any questions or concerns to: ABASteigerFellowship@americanbar.org

The ABA's Antitrust and Consumer Protection section is a valuable resource for students interested in consumer protection, and I recommend checking it out more generally.

Airbnb had a bad day too: court rejects 230, First Amendment challenges to SF rental ordinance

Airbnb, Inc. v. City and County of San Francisco, 16-cv-03615 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 8, 2016)

Airbnb and HomeAway sought to enjoin SF’s ordinance making it a misdemeanor to provide booking services for unregistered rental units.  The court denied a preliminary injunction.

Airbnb and HomeAway make money by charging hosts and guests a service fee based on the cost of the rental.  Their posting process is automated and requires the host to fill in some required fields, but the sites don’t verify, review or edit the information provided by the host, and do not contribute content of their own to the listing.

In 2015, San Francisco banned its effective ban on “tourist or transient” rentals, but required that a host register a residence with San Francisco before making it available as a short-term rental.  Registration has various prerequisites.  Plaintiffs agreed that a residential unit must be lawfully registered before being rented on a short-term basis, but compliance with the registration requirement has been spotty:

As of November 2015, for example, San Francisco had received only 1,082 short-term rental registration applications while Airbnb listed 5,378 unique short-term rental hosts in San Francisco, which points to a registration rate of just 20% even without including HomeAway and other similar services.  By March 2016, the ratio was 1,647 registered out of 7,046 listed -- a registration rate of approximately 25%. 

Enforcement of the registration requirement was “hampered by the City’s lack of information” because short-term rentals “operate in private residences without any commercial signage posted” and because hosting platforms “do not disclose addresses or booking information about their hosts.”  An August 2016 ordinance made it a misdemeanor to collect a fee for providing booking services for the rental of an unregistered unit.  A“Booking Service” is defined in relevant part as “any reservation and/or payment service provided by a person or entity that facilitates a short-term rental transaction between an Owner . . . and a prospective tourist or transient user . . . for which the person or entity collects or receives . . . a fee in connection with the reservation and/or payment services.” A “Hosting Platform” is a “person or entity that participates in the short-term rental business by providing, and collecting or receiving a fee for, Booking Services,”  but doesn’t need to be “an online platform” and encompasses non-Internet based services as well.  The Ordinance permits a Hosting Platform to “provide, and collect a fee for, Booking Services in connection with short-term rentals” only when the units rented are lawfully registered on the Short Term Residential Rental Registry at the time of rental.  “Lawfully registered” means that a host has obtained a registration number from the San Francisco’s administrative office, the OSTR.  A violation is a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and imprisonment for up to six months.

Plaintiffs argued that the Ordinance was preempted by § 230 of the CDA.  Plaintiffs argued that the threat of a criminal penalty for providing and receiving a fee for Booking Services for an unregistered unit required them to actively monitor and police listings by third parties to verify registration.  This was, they argued, tantamount to treating them as a publisher because it involved the traditional publication functions of “reviewing, editing, and deciding whether to publish or to withdraw from publication third-party content.” 

But, the court concluded, the Ordinance didn’t treat them as publishers or speakers of the rental listings.  It didn’t regulate what the listings could or couldn’t say. It created no monitoring or blocking obligation.  Plaintiffs were perfectly free to publish any listing they get from a host and to collect fees for doing so, whether the unit was lawfully registered or not. The only thing that could create liability was plaintiffs’ own conduct: providing and collecting a fee for booking services in connection with an unregistered unit.  This didn’t depend on who was the publisher or who was the speaker.  Section 230(c) does not create “a general immunity from liability deriving from third-party content.”

 “[T]he challenged Ordinance regulates plaintiffs’ own conduct as Booking Service providers and cares not a whit about what is or is not featured on their websites.” Plaintiffs argued that the ordinance would still have the practical effect of requiring them to monitor listings and remove posts for unregistered rentals.  But the ordinance didn’t compel that result.  Plaintiffs could post a notice to users that they could provide Booking Services in San Francisco only for units that are lawfully registered and verified as such. Or they could charge fees for publishing listings, rather than for facilitating transactions, which would be perfectly lawful.  [Interesting result, not entirely surprising.  If Airbnb provided its ISP services via a negative option billing plan and a state banned negative option billing, I would think 230 would not preclude that regulation either.]

Likewise, there was no First Amendment barrier to the ordinance.  The First Amendment doesn’t prevent restrictions directed at commerce or conduct from imposing incidental burdens on speech.  The conduct at issue doesn’t have a significant expressive element, nor did the ordinance have the inevitable effect of “‘singling out those engaged in expressive activity.’”   The law wasn’t limited to internet platforms and there was no indication that there was any speech-suppressive motivation.  The Ordinance was supposed to help enforce compliance with the registration requirement: it was directed at specific business transactions and practices, and “not to any message the businesses express.”

Sorrell didn’t require a different outcome, nor did Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of N.Y. State Crime Victims Bd., 502 U.S. 105 (1991).  Sorrell on its face “disfavor[ed] marketing, that is, speech with a particular content,” and “[m]ore than that, . . . disfavor[ed] specific speakers, namely pharmaceutical manufacturers.”  Simon & Schuster also featured a “content-based statute” because it singled out income derived from “expression[s] of [an] accused or convicted person’s thoughts, feelings, opinions or emotions” about the crime.  That wasn’t similar to the ordinance, nor was the ordinance in Reed v. Town of Gilbert.  None of those laws were “restrictions directed at commerce or conduct,” as the ordinance was here, with only an incidental impact on speech. 

Even if the Ordinance was reviewed as a restriction on commercial speech, it survived scrutiny.  The speech affected was commercial speech.   A “threshold requirement” for protection for such speech is that it must be related to lawful activity.  If it is related to unlawful activity, the commercial speech at issue isn’t protected by the First Amendment and no further analysis would be required.  And such was the case here: the speech at issue proposed an illegal transaction, because it is illegal in San Francisco to rent a unit that is not lawfully registered. 

However, the court did accept SF’s concession that the ordinance didn’t impose criminal liability without proof of scienter.  There was no reason to think that SF intended to dispense with the standard mens rea requirement for criminal liability.  As for potential vagueness, SF bound itself to the interpretations that “lawfully registered” meant having a registration certificate (not necessarily complying with all the underlying requirements ranging from insurance to tax reports) and that “at the time it is rented” meant when the booking transaction occurred. 


Finally, plaintiffs pointed out that SF’s enforcement agency OSTR wasn’t able to provide prompt and effective registration verification.  SF wouldn’t enforce the ordinance while this issue was being litigated. 

Tuesday, November 08, 2016

Evidence of good faith not relevant for liability, but relevant for damages in false advertising cases

A.L.S. Enterprises, Inc. v. Robinson Outdoor Products, LLC, No. 14-CV-500, 2016 WL 4260062 (W.D. Mich. May 9, 2016)

ALS sued Robinson for false advertising over odor control claims for its hunting apparel; the court in this and a related order resolves some false advertising-related evidentiary issues.  First, ALS moved to preclude Robinson from offering evidence or argument that its ad claims are supported by testing, in general, as opposed to specific tests; and to preclude Robinson from presenting evidence that it acted in good faith reliance on test results.

challenged 40/200 claims

When an establishment claim is at issue, “the defendant must identify the cited tests.” Where a superiority claim does not purport to rest on test results, the plaintiff can prove falsity only by adducing evidence that affirmatively shows that the claim is false.  Robinson’s ads claimed that its product adsorbed “up to 40% more [odor] than carbon” ad claim; that it had “[m]ore odor adsorbing capacity than any competitor”; provided retailers with charts showing adsorption rates; and claims “blocks odor 8x better than zeolite and 3x better than carbon alloy.” The court agreed that these were establishment claims, yet, during discovery, Robinson’s witnesses failed to identify specific tests supporting these claims.  Instead, they cited general product development and testing processes or extrapolations from unspecified noncomparative tests.  The court granted ALS’s motion in limine to preclude references to such tests, other than one identified test known as the Aspen Report

ALS also argued that Robinson should be precluded from presenting testimony that it relied in good faith on the Aspen Report or any of the other unspecified testing that Robinson claimed supported its advertising statements.  ALS responded that its good faith was relevant to damages if it’s held liable. “With regard to liability for false advertising under the Lanham Act, the law appears settled that a defendant’s state of mind is not relevant to the issue of liability.” Not so with damages; the law is unsettled because the 1999 amendment to § 35(a) of the Lanham Act made it unclear whether willfulness is required for an award of profits.  The most recent Sixth Circuit precedent says willfulness isn’t required, but is an element that can be considered in weighing the equities, and bears on relevant factors, such as whether the defendant had the intent to confuse or deceive and whether sales had been diverted. Thus, evidence pertaining to Robinson’s good faith was relevant to damages.  Moreover, such evidence, even if self-serving, had more than minimal probative value and didn’t present enough of a danger of unfair prejudice or confusion to outweigh that value.  “In fact, it is entirely possible that testimony from Robinson’s witnesses that ‘dodg[es] substantive questions about its testing with vague assertions and conclusory statements about its intent,’ as ALS describes it, may be the most powerful evidence the jury may hear supporting a damage award for ALS.” [Yikes.]

A.L.S. Enterprises, Inc. v. Robinson Outdoor Products, LLC, No. 14-CV-500, 2016 WL 4257453 (W.D. Mich. May 9, 2016)

Robinson moved to exclude evidence and argument (1) about a prior lawsuit against Robinson under the Lanham Act, Wildlife Research Center, Inc. v. Robinson Outdoors, Inc., No. 02-CV-2773 (D. Minn) and (2) relating to Robinson’s offer to remove from its apparel hangtags containing the allegedly false or misleading “40/200” claims.  

In Wildlife Research Ctr. v. Robinson Outdoors, Inc., 409 F. Supp. 2d 1131 (D. Minn. 2005), a jury awarded the plaintiff close to $5 million for Robinson’s false advertising, consisting of damages and Robinson’s profits.  Robinson argued that the jury would wrongly treat reference to the case as propensity evidence, and that it wasn’t relevant to the issue of willfulness because the litigation occurred nearly ten years ago and involved a different product and different executive decision maker.

ALS responded that Robinson’s present corporate personnel testified in the trial, and ALS intended to show that Robinson learned from the litigation that it had to be “very careful” in its advertising claims, but instead acted in a completely different manner in promoting the products at issue here. Because this was evidence of past wrongdoing, Rule 403(b) concerns applied.  Although rebutting Robinson’s claim of good-faith reliance on testing in connection with damages “would seem to be a permissible use,” it still had minimal probative value to show Robinson’s knowledge of the need for care, while the potential for jury confusion and unfair prejudice at the mention of prior false advertising litigation “is both apparent and substantial, and certainly outweighs any probative value of the evidence.” ALS could ask Robinson’s witness whether Robinson knew it had to be “very careful” in its advertising; if the witness denied this fact, ALS could refer to the prior litigation for the limited purpose of impeachment.

Robinson also asked the court to exclude evidence and testimony concerning Robinson’s removal of hangtags containing the “40/200” claims at issue from its apparel, because this offer occurred in the context of settlement discussions early on in the case. Robinson cited Rule 408 (settlement negotiations and discussions) and Rule 407 (subsequent remedial measures), and argued that the evidence was irrelevant.

ALS responded by noting “Robinson’s shifting story during discovery about hangtag removal—first that it was unable to specify when removal took place, and then stating that it first began to remove hangtags in late June of 2014,” then testimony that hangtags were still being sent to retailers in September 2014, then a June 2015 email instructing Robinson’s warehouse to remove or cover all tags, and then photos from a store in April 2016 of a Robinson product bearing the hangtag and accompanying sticker.  ALS argued that this evidence was relevant to the propriety of injunctive relief, ALS’s entitlement to treble damages or attorney fees based on an exceptional case finding, and the credibility of Robinson’s witnesses.

Evidence of Robinson’s lagging hangtag removal was relevant to ALS’s allegation that Robinson continued to run false ads even after it had test results showing that its products were no better at adsorbing odors than comparable carbon products. This evidence didn’t concern “conduct or statements made during compromise negotiations about the claim.” Fed. R. Evid. 408(a)(2). All of the conduct occurred outside of compromise negotiations. Nor was Rule 407 on subsequent remedial measures implicated, because ALS wasn’t presenting the evidence to show that Robinson removed the hangtags, but rather, to show that it failed to remove them even once it knew the truth. This was relevant to good faith, among other things.